﻿FN Clarivate Analytics Web of Science
VR 1.0
PT J
AU Hossen, MA
   Benson, D
   Hossain, SZ
   Sultana, Z
   Rahman, MM
AF Hossen, M. Anwar
   Benson, David
   Hossain, Syeda Zakia
   Sultana, Zakia
   Rahman, Md Mizanur
TI Gendered Perspectives on Climate Change Adaptation: A Quest for Social
   Sustainability in Badlagaree Village, Bangladesh
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; drought; gender; social vulnerability; violence against
   women; social development; adaptation; sustainability
ID COLLABORATIVE GOVERNANCE; LEVEL ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY; DROUGHT;
   WATER; COMMUNITIES; FUTURE; PLACE
AB Climate change effects cause major socioeconomic challenges for marginalized groups, particularly women, in Bangladesh. Specifically, drought increases resource scarcity, causing social problems that impact women, which can be described as the gendered sociocultural construction of vulnerabilities. Given this constructed dimension of gender-based vulnerability, this paper explores the effects of drought on marginalized women in one local case study, namely Badlagaree village in Gaibandha district, Bangladesh. To examine this linkage, we collected qualitative primary data using ethnographic research methods, primarily focus group discussions. Findings show that gender-based vulnerability is increasing due to growing drought effects, including agricultural production loss. Marginalized women, because of their gender identity, encounter these drought effects through unemployment, food insecurity, illiteracy, early marriage, dowry costs and violence. While further national-scale research is required, this paper argues that in order to overcome such gender-based vulnerability, current development policies, social programs, and adaptation strategies should better recognize such social dynamics. Further, a gender-specific understanding requires incorporation into adaptation policies through greater collaborative governance as an important prerequisite for sustainability.
C1 [Hossen, M. Anwar; Sultana, Zakia] Univ Dhaka, Dept Sociol, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
   [Benson, David] Univ Exeter, Coll Social Sci & Int Studies, Exeter EX4 4PY, Devon, England.
   [Hossain, Syeda Zakia] Univ Sydney, Fac Med & Hlth, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
   [Rahman, Md Mizanur] United Int Univ, Dept Environm & Dev Studies, Dhaka 1212, Bangladesh.
C3 University of Dhaka; University of Exeter; University of Sydney; United
   International University (UIU)
RP Hossen, MA (corresponding author), Univ Dhaka, Dept Sociol, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
EM anwar_sociology@du.ac.bd; d.i.benson@exeter.ac.uk; szakia60@gmail.com;
   zakia.hossain@sydney.edu.au; mizanur@idss.uiu.ac.bd
RI Rahman, Md. Mizanur/U-2302-2017; Hossain, Syeda/ABF-9499-2020
OI Hossen, M. Anwar/0000-0002-9282-3228
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NR 50
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 6
U2 25
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 14
AR 1922
DI 10.3390/w13141922
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA TO7GJ
UT WOS:000677074800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Huss, M
   Brander, M
   Kassie, M
   Ehlert, U
   Bernauer, T
AF Huss, M.
   Brander, M.
   Kassie, M.
   Ehlert, U.
   Bernauer, T.
TI Improved storage mitigates vulnerability to food-supply shocks in
   smallholder agriculture during the COVID-19 pandemic
SO GLOBAL FOOD SECURITY-AGRICULTURE POLICY ECONOMICS AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Food insecurity; COVID-19; Smallholder farmers; Post-harvest losses;
   Hermetic storage; RCT
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; TECHNOLOGY; SECURITY; INSECURITY; INDICATORS; BAGS
AB Millions of smallholder farmers in low-income countries are highly vulnerable to food-supply shocks, and reducing this vulnerability remains challenging in view of climatic changes. Restrictions to limit the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic produced a severe supply-side shock in rural areas of Sub-Saharan Africa, including through frictions in agricultural markets. We use a large-scale field experiment to examine the effects of improved on farm storage on household food security during COVID-19 restrictions. Based on text message survey data we find that the prevalence of food insecurity increased in control group households during COVID-19 restrictions (coinciding with the agricultural lean season). In treatment households, equipped with an improved on-farm storage technology and training in its use, food insecurity was lower during COVID-19 restrictions. This underscores the benefits of improved on-farm storage for mitigating vulnerability to food-supply shocks. These insights are relevant for the larger, long-term question of climate change adaptation, and also regarding tradeoffs between public health protection and food security.
C1 [Huss, M.; Brander, M.; Bernauer, T.] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Sci Technol & Policy ISTP, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Huss, M.; Brander, M.] Univ Zurich, Informat & Sustainabil Res Grp, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Kassie, M.] Int Ctr Insect Physiol & Ecol Icipe, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Ehlert, U.] Univ Zurich, Inst Psychol, Zurich, Switzerland.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; University of
   Zurich; International Centre of Insect Physiology & Ecology (ICIPE);
   University of Zurich
RP Brander, M (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Sci Technol & Policy ISTP, Zurich, Switzerland.
EM mbrander@ethz.ch
RI Kassie, Menale/ADT-2906-2022
OI Bernauer, Thomas/0000-0002-3775-6245; , Menale
   Kassie/0000-0002-6754-2432
FU Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation; ETH4D Research Challenges;
   Stiftung Dreiklang; Stiftung Fons Margarita; United Kingdom's Department
   for International Development (DFID)
FX This research project (and the research presented in this paper) has
   been supported by the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation,
   ETH4D Research Challenges, Stiftung Dreiklang, Stiftung Fons Margarita,
   and three anonymous foundations. In addition, M.K. gratefully
   acknowledges core financial assistance to icipe provided by the United
   Kingdom's Department for International Development (DFID).
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NR 38
TC 41
Z9 46
U1 2
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2211-9124
J9 GLOB FOOD SECUR-AGR
JI Glob. Food Secur.-Agric.Policy
PD MAR
PY 2021
VL 28
AR 100468
DI 10.1016/j.gfs.2020.100468
PG 7
WC Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Food Science & Technology
GA QT5VI
UT WOS:000626654900001
PM 36568028
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Mardiyati, S
   Natsir, M
   Nailah
AF Mardiyati, Sri
   Natsir, Mohammad
   Nailah
GP IOP
TI Literacy and adaptation strategy of rainfed lowland farmer on climate
   change risk in Takalar Regency
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENTAL ECOLOGY OF FOOD SECURITY
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 1st International Conference on Environmental Ecology of Food Security
   (ICEFS)
CY MAR 30, 2020
CL Fac Agr, Dept Agr Socio Econ, Agribusiness Study Program, Makassar,
   INDONESIA
SP Hasanuddin Univ, Publication Management Ctr
HO Fac Agr, Dept Agr Socio Econ, Agribusiness Study Program
AB This study aims to determine the level of literacy of farmers to the risk of climate change and to analyze climate change risk adaptation strategies in rainfed rice fields. This research was carried out intentionally in areas that have relatively wider rainfed rice fields in the Districts of North Polombakeng and South Polombakeng, Takalar Regency, South Sulawesi Province. Sampling was conducted purposively on 147 farmer respondents. Data sourced from primary and secondary data. Data analysis is a qualitative and quantitative descriptive analysis. The results of this study indicate that the level of literacy of rainfed lowland rice farmers to climate change is the highest on the component of climate change impacts, while the lowest on aspects of climate change adaptation strategies. Farmers' adaptation strategies in dealing with climate change in rainfed rice farming are the most dominant, including tracking climate change information, shifting planting time, managing cropping patterns, planting spacing, and using short-lived varieties. Rainfed lowland rice farmers in strengthening household food security to face the risk of climate change are more dominant in implementing storage strategies (food reserves), diversifying income in farming and non-farming, and empowering family members to obtain additional income.
C1 [Mardiyati, Sri; Natsir, Mohammad; Nailah] Muhammadiyah Univ Makassar, Agr Fac, Agribusiness Dept, Kota Makassar, Sulawesi Selata, Indonesia.
RP Mardiyati, S (corresponding author), Muhammadiyah Univ Makassar, Agr Fac, Agribusiness Dept, Kota Makassar, Sulawesi Selata, Indonesia.
EM sri.mardiyati@unismuh.ac.id
OI MARDIYATI, SRI/0000-0003-1514-8916
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NR 7
TC 1
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 0
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2021
VL 681
AR 012080
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/681/1/012080
PG 5
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Agronomy; Economics; Environmental
   Sciences; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Public Administration
GA BR9PU
UT WOS:000679400700080
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Musah-Surugu, IJ
   Bawole, JN
   Ahenkan, A
AF Musah-Surugu, Issah Justice
   Bawole, Justice Nyigmah
   Ahenkan, Albert
TI The "Third Sector" and Climate Change Adaptation Governance in
   Sub-Saharan Africa: Experience from Ghana
SO VOLUNTAS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Non-governmental organization; Local people
ID LOCAL-GOVERNMENT; NGOS; ORGANIZATIONS; VULNERABILITY; PEOPLE; STATE
AB In spite of growing evidence of non-governmental organizations' (NGOs) active participation in both bottom-up and top-down climate change policy negotiations and implementation, a research effort that focuses on the former barely exists. Grounded within the qualitative research approach, this paper contributes to the emerging climate policy literature by drawing on experiences from three purposefully selected non-state actors' adaptation program in Ghana. The paper observes that through tripartite mechanismsclimate advocacy, direct climate service provision and local empowerment, NGOs significantly play a complementary role in building local adaptive capacities, especially among people who are already living at or close to the margins of survival. The paper again found that NGOs tacitly explore four interrelated social tactics (rulemaking, alliance brokerage, resource brokerage, and framing) to gain the cooperation of local actors for the implementation of adaptation interventions. In order to improve the performance and sustainability of adaptation interventions, the paper puts forward that NGOs should, among other things, harmonize their interventions to resonate with local interest and identity and also nurture capable project caretakers before community exit.
C1 [Musah-Surugu, Issah Justice; Bawole, Justice Nyigmah; Ahenkan, Albert] Univ Ghana, Accra, Ghana.
C3 University of Ghana
RP Bawole, JN (corresponding author), Univ Ghana, Accra, Ghana.
EM Musah123@gmail.com; jnbawole@ug.edu.gh
RI Bawole, Justice/AEM-5877-2022
OI Bawole, Justice Nyigmah/0000-0002-5793-4184
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NR 65
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 2
U2 17
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0957-8765
EI 1573-7888
J9 VOLUNTAS
JI Voluntas
PD APR
PY 2019
VL 30
IS 2
BP 312
EP 326
DI 10.1007/s11266-018-9962-5
PG 15
WC Social Issues
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Issues
GA HY4TA
UT WOS:000468119600003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hamann, A
   Roberts, DR
   Barber, QE
   Carroll, C
   Nielsen, SE
AF Hamann, Andreas
   Roberts, David R.
   Barber, Quinn E.
   Carroll, Carlos
   Nielsen, Scott E.
TI Velocity of climate change algorithms for guiding conservation and
   management
SO GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE assisted migration; climate change adaptation; climate change
   vulnerability; conservation; no-analogue climates
ID ASSISTED MIGRATION
AB The velocity of climate change is an elegant analytical concept that can be used to evaluate the exposure of organisms to climate change. In essence, one divides the rate of climate change by the rate of spatial climate variability to obtain a speed at which species must migrate over the surface of the earth to maintain constant climate conditions. However, to apply the algorithm for conservation and management purposes, additional information is needed to improve realism at local scales. For example, destination information is needed to ensure that vectors describing speed and direction of required migration do not point toward a climatic cul-de-sac by pointing beyond mountain tops. Here, we present an analytical approach that conforms to standard velocity algorithms if climate equivalents are nearby. Otherwise, the algorithm extends the search for climate refugia, which can be expanded to search for multivariate climate matches. With source and destination information available, forward and backward velocities can be calculated allowing useful inferences about conservation of species (present-to-future velocities) and management of species populations (future-to-present velocities).
C1 [Hamann, Andreas; Roberts, David R.; Barber, Quinn E.; Nielsen, Scott E.] Univ Alberta, Dept Renewable Resources, Fac Agr Life & Environm Sci, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H1, Canada.
   [Carroll, Carlos] Klamath Ctr Conservat Res, Orleans, CA 95556 USA.
C3 University of Alberta
RP Hamann, A (corresponding author), Univ Alberta, Dept Renewable Resources, Fac Agr Life & Environm Sci, 751 Gen Serv Bldg, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H1, Canada.
EM andreas.hamann@ualberta.ca
RI Nielsen, Scott/O-7482-2019
OI Hamann, Andreas/0000-0003-2046-4550; Roberts, David/0000-0002-3437-2422
FU Fulbright Program; Genome Canada; Genome BC; GenomeAlberta; Alberta
   Innovates Bio Solutions; Forest Genetics Council of British Columbia; BC
   Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resources Operations; Virginia
   Tech; University of British Columbia; University of California, Davis;
   Wilburforce foundation
FX We thank the Fulbright Program for a visiting scholar grant and the host
   David Ackerly at UC Berkeley for valuable discussions. This research is
   part of the AdapTree Project, funded by Genome Canada, Genome BC,
   GenomeAlberta, Alberta Innovates Bio Solutions, the Forest Genetics
   Council of British Columbia, the BC Ministry of Forests, Lands and
   Natural Resources Operations, Virginia Tech, the University of British
   Columbia, and the University of California, Davis. Additional funding
   was provided by the Wilburforce foundation.
CR Ackerly DD, 2010, DIVERS DISTRIB, V16, P476, DOI 10.1111/j.1472-4642.2010.00654.x
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NR 18
TC 167
Z9 181
U1 8
U2 129
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1354-1013
EI 1365-2486
J9 GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
JI Glob. Change Biol.
PD FEB
PY 2015
VL 21
IS 2
BP 997
EP 1004
DI 10.1111/gcb.12736
PG 8
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CA1DE
UT WOS:000348652400040
PM 25310933
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pomeroy, R
   Parks, J
   Reaugh-Flower, K
   Guidote, M
   Govan, H
   Atkinson, S
AF Pomeroy, Robert
   Parks, John
   Reaugh-Flower, Kathleen
   Guidote, Mar
   Govan, Hugh
   Atkinson, Scott
TI Status and Priority Capacity Needs for Local Compliance and
   Community-Supported Enforcement of Marine Resource Rules and Regulations
   in the Coral Triangle Region
SO COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE community-supported enforcement; compliance; Coral Triangle region; IUU
   fishing
ID FISHERIES; LEGITIMACY
AB Combating illegal and destructive resource exploitation in the Coral Triangle is central to ensuring the long-term effective management of fisheries, marine protected areas, and climate change adaptation efforts. This article presents results of an investigation of the perceived level of local compliance and enforcement with marine resource rules and regulations and evaluates the effectiveness or potential for community-supported enforcement efforts in the Coral Triangle region. The findings are consistent with those of the literature on compliance and enforcement that any compliance and enforcement system must not only use deterrence, but also be perceived by fishers as being legitimate, fair, accountable and equitable and the need for developing a personal morality and a social environment that supports compliance. There is an opportunity to strategically build on shared value and cultural norms that can promote collaborative fisheries management as a mechanism to increase compliance through non-coercive efforts. Strengthening the long-term capacity for consistent delivery of local support to marine management and enforcement will increase local compliance rates through time.
C1 [Pomeroy, Robert] Univ Connecticut, Agr & Resource Econ CT Sea Grant, Groton, CT 06340 USA.
   [Parks, John] Marine Management Solut, Honolulu, HI USA.
   [Reaugh-Flower, Kathleen] Conservat Int, Betty & Gordon Moore Ctr Sci & Oceans, Arlington, VA USA.
   [Guidote, Mar] Coastal Policy & Maritime Enforcement, Manila, Cebu, Philippines.
   [Govan, Hugh] Sustainable Isl Innovat, Suva, Viti Levu, Fiji.
   [Atkinson, Scott] Conservat Int, Betty & Gordon Moore Ctr Sci & Oceans, Honolulu, HI USA.
C3 University of Connecticut; Conservation International; Conservation
   International
RP Pomeroy, R (corresponding author), Univ Connecticut, Agr & Resource Econ CT Sea Grant, Room 380,Marine Sci Bldg,1080 Shennecossett Rd, Groton, CT 06340 USA.
EM robert.pomeroy@uconn.edu
RI Govan, Hugh/O-6123-2019
OI Govan, Hugh/0000-0003-4387-5029; Flower, Kathleen/0000-0002-4110-8101;
   Parks, John/0000-0003-4363-3783
FU USAID through the Coral Triangle Support Partnership (CTSP) project, GCP
   LWA Award [LAG-A-00-99-00048-00]
FX This research was supported by USAID through the Coral Triangle Support
   Partnership (CTSP) project, GCP LWA Award Number LAG-A-00-99-00048-00.
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NR 27
TC 20
Z9 23
U1 0
U2 23
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 0892-0753
EI 1521-0421
J9 COAST MANAGE
JI Coast. Manage.
PY 2015
VL 43
IS 3
BP 301
EP 328
DI 10.1080/08920753.2015.1030330
PG 28
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CJ3JK
UT WOS:000355379000005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gordon, JE
   Barron, HF
AF Gordon, John E.
   Barron, Hugh F.
TI Valuing Geodiversity and Geoconservation: Developing a More Strategic
   Ecosystem Approach
SO SCOTTISH GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE geodiversity; ecosystem approach; ecosystem services; strategic
   framework
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE
AB This paper reviews the values and benefits of geodiversity and geoconservation in the context of the Strategic Objectives and National Outcomes in the Scottish Government's National Performance Framework, particularly in relation to: economic development; climate change adaptation; biodiversity; science and education; and recreation, health and cultural inspiration. A key challenge is to improve the integration of geodiversity in environmental policy and its implementation in order to deliver more holistic and sustainable environmental management and wider public benefits. This requires greater awareness and recognition of the key benefits and ecosystem services that geodiversity provides for society. With an overall objective of promoting integration of geodiversity into relevant policies and decision frameworks, we advocate a more strategic, ecosystem-based approach to address: the future-proofing of ecosystem services, particularly in a context of climate change and rising sea-levels; conservation and sustainable management of geodiversity both in designated sites and in the wider countryside; raising awareness of the value of geodiversity and its contribution to ecosystem services; and improving understanding of geodiversity and key knowledge gaps. Such an approach is adopted in the Scotland's Geodiversity Charter.
C1 [Gordon, John E.] Univ St Andrews, Sch Geog & Geosci, St Andrews KY16 9AL, Fife, Scotland.
   [Gordon, John E.] Scottish Nat Heritage, Edinburgh EH12 7AT, Midlothian, Scotland.
   [Barron, Hugh F.] British Geol Survey, Edinburgh EH9 3LA, Midlothian, Scotland.
C3 University of St Andrews; UK Research & Innovation (UKRI); Natural
   Environment Research Council (NERC); NERC British Geological Survey
RP Gordon, JE (corresponding author), Univ St Andrews, Sch Geog & Geosci, St Andrews KY16 9AL, Fife, Scotland.
EM jeg4@st-andrews.ac.uk
RI Gordon, John/ISA-2835-2023
FU NERC [bgs05001] Funding Source: UKRI
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NR 82
TC 34
Z9 35
U1 1
U2 41
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1470-2541
EI 1751-665X
J9 SCOT GEOGR J
JI Scott. Geogr. J.
PY 2012
VL 128
IS 3-4
BP 278
EP 297
DI 10.1080/14702541.2012.725861
PG 20
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA 041CO
UT WOS:000311374000008
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Klein, RJT
AF Klein, Richard J. T.
BE Giupponi, C
   Shechter, M
TI 2. Adaptation to climate variability and change: what is optimal and
   appropriate?
SO CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE MEDITERRANEAN: SOCIO-ECONOMIC PERSPECTIVES OF
   IMPACTS, VULNERABILITY AND ADAPTATION
SE FONDAZIONE ENI ENRICO MATTEI (FEEM) SERIES ON ECONOMICS AND THE
   ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Workshop on Socio-Economic Assessments of Climate Change in the
   Mediterranean
CY 2001
CL Milan, ITALY
SP FEEM, RICAMARE
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE
C1 Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Potsdam, Germany.
C3 Potsdam Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung
RI Klein, Richard J.T./B-1148-2009
OI Klein, Richard J.T./0000-0002-9458-0944
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NR 22
TC 23
Z9 31
U1 0
U2 6
PU EDWARD ELGAR PUBLISHING LTD
PI CHELTENHAM
PA GLENSANDA HOUSE, MONTPELLIER PARADE, CHELTENHAM GL50 1UA, GLOS, ENGLAND
BN 1-84376-154-8
J9 FEEM SER ECON ENVIR
PY 2003
BP 32
EP 50
PG 19
WC Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BGR89
UT WOS:000250195200004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Aldhaher, DAG
   Selçuk, SA
AF Aldhaher, Dunya Abdulazeez Gheni
   Selcuk, Semra Arslan
TI Energy retrofit and climate adaptive design of dwellings in the hot arid
   climate: Trends and future challenges
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RENEWABLE ENERGY DEVELOPMENT-IJRED
LA English
DT Article
DE Energy Retrofit; Energy Efficiency; Climate Adaptive Design; Hot Arid
   Climate; Dwellings; Bibliometric Analysis
ID THERMAL COMFORT; BUILDINGS; CONSUMPTION; STATE; PERFORMANCE; SIMULATION;
   SECTOR; TECHNOLOGIES; BEHAVIOR; IMPACT
AB As long as buildings face various climate change impacts in recent decades, such as increased heat, particularly in the residential sector. Therefore, energy retrofit, and climate-adaptive designs may contribute significantly to climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies. At the same time, these strategies do not only improve the sustainability of dwellings/houses/residences but also contribute to broader goals of increasing energy efficiency, reducing environmental impact, offering economic benefits, and enhancing the community's resilience in the challenges they face impact from the effects of climate change. This study aims to examine and present the development of energy retrofitting, energy efficiency and climate-adaptive design for dwellings/ residential buildings in hot weather publications through bibliometric research. The research has been examined within the Web of ScienceTM Core Collection (W.O.S.) online database spanning from 2012 to November 2023 by using the "Title/Abstract/Keywords" category, and a comprehensive data visualisation has been conducted utilising the VOSviewer and CiteSpace programmes. The findings indicate the research trends in the literature and future challenges, and the results from these findings demonstrate the need for sustainable and energy-efficient buildings to preserve the environment and climate. These sustainable developments focus on improvements in energy retrofitting technologies, energy efficiency and saving targets, indoor thermal comfort, optimising passive design and minimising energy demand. This study will probably be a source to provide valuable insights for researchers, practitioners, experts, and policymakers to understand the implications of energy retrofitting and climate-adaptive design in hot arid climates. As well as it would offer theoretical and practical initiatives to be applied in this field.
C1 [Aldhaher, Dunya Abdulazeez Gheni; Selcuk, Semra Arslan] Gazi Univ, Fac Architecture, Dept Architecture, Ankara, Turkiye.
C3 Gazi University
RP Aldhaher, DAG (corresponding author), Gazi Univ, Fac Architecture, Dept Architecture, Ankara, Turkiye.
EM dunyaaldhahir88@gmail.com
RI Aldhaher, Dunya/IXW-8178-2023; ARSLAN SELCUK, SEMRA/AHB-5517-2022
OI ARSLAN SELCUK, SEMRA/0000-0002-2128-2858
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NR 62
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU DIPONEGORO UNIV
PI SEMARANG
PA DEPT MARINE SCI, SEMARANG, 00000, INDONESIA
SN 2252-4940
J9 INT J RENEW ENERGY D
JI Int. J. Renew. Energy Dev.-IJRED
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 13
IS 5
DI 10.61435/ijred.2024.60206
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Energy & Fuels
GA G3D2I
UT WOS:001315472100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Kahrl, F
   Roland-Holst, D
AF Kahrl, Fredrich
   Roland-Holst, David
BA Kahrl, F
   RolandHolst, D
BF Kahrl, F
   RolandHolst, D
TI Economic Perspectives on Climate Adaptation
SO CLIMATE CHANGE IN CALIFORNIA: RISK AND RESPONSE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
NR 0
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS
PI OAKLAND
PA 155 GRAND AVE, SUITE 400, OAKLAND, CA 94612-3758 USA
BN 978-0-520-27181-4; 978-0-520-95380-2
PY 2012
BP 13
EP 29
D2 10.1525/california/9780520271814.001.0001
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BFF42
UT WOS:000319660000003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Karjalainen, LE
AF Karjalainen, Linda E.
TI Towards sustainable urban transport-Political agenda formation and
   policy windows in Helsinki, Oslo, and Stockholm
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE multiple streams framework; political agenda; sustainable urban
   transport; transport planning; transport policy
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; MOBILITY; RETHINKING; GOVERNANCE; INDICATORS;
   NARRATIVES; ATTITUDES; BEHAVIOR; LESSONS; BICYCLE
AB This paper examines the development of urban transport political agendas in three Nordic capital cities, Helsinki, Oslo, and Stockholm, that strive towards urban sustainability. Utilising the Multiple Streams framework as a basis for analysis, an overview of local problems, policy solutions, and politics that have characterised transport systems and the related policy development processes over time is constructed. The attention is then drawn towards the points in time where the streams connect, and policy windows occur, to detect formative changes and their enablers towards sustainability. The data consists of 18 semi-structured expert interviews, conducted amongst municipal policymakers and planners. The results reveal several policy windows that have transformed the local transport systems towards sustainability and an increasingly people-oriented approach. The relevance of global climate change awareness, international planning trends for liveability and cycling, public pressure, individual political decisions, and establishment of modal hierarchy is evident across the case cities, while car traffic regulation is politically challenging and addressed through very different means at very different times. The findings of this paper outline diverse ways for advancing sustainability in local policy development but also detect methods for politically halting the process.
C1 [Karjalainen, Linda E.] Univ Helsinki, Ecosyst & Environm Res Programme, Fac Biol & Environm Sci, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Karjalainen, Linda E.] Aalto Univ, Sch Engn, Dept Built Environm, Espoo, Finland.
   [Karjalainen, Linda E.] Finnish Environm Inst, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Karjalainen, Linda E.] Dept Built Environm Spatial Planning & Transportat, POB 14100, FI-00076 Aalto, Finland.
   [Karjalainen, Linda E.] Dept Built Environm Spatial Planning & Transportat, Otakaari 4, FI-02150 Espoo, Finland.
C3 University of Helsinki; Aalto University; Finnish Environment Institute;
   Aalto University
RP Karjalainen, LE (corresponding author), Dept Built Environm Spatial Planning & Transportat, POB 14100, FI-00076 Aalto, Finland.; Karjalainen, LE (corresponding author), Dept Built Environm Spatial Planning & Transportat, Otakaari 4, FI-02150 Espoo, Finland.
EM linda.karjalainen@aalto.fi
OI Karjalainen, Linda/0000-0001-8313-7755
FU Tiina ja Antti Herlinin sti
FX I want to thank Professor Sirkku Juhola and Professor Dominic Stead for
   their comments and suggestions during the writing process of this
   manuscript. I additionally want to thank the anonymous reviewers whose
   comments immensely improved the quality of this manuscript, and above
   all the case city interviewees who enabled me to conduct this research.
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NR 66
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 6
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA ONE MONTGOMERY ST, SUITE 1200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104 USA
SN 1756-932X
EI 1756-9338
J9 ENVIRON POLICY GOV
JI Environ. Policy Gov.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 34
IS 6
BP 568
EP 581
DI 10.1002/eet.2100
EA MAR 2024
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA O5W4W
UT WOS:001186604200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bulti, AT
   Amelo, GAY
AF Bulti, Abebe Tadesse
   Amelo, Gonse Amelo Yutura
TI Water infrastructure resilience and water supply and sanitation
   development challenges in developing countries
SO AQUA-WATER INFRASTRUCTURE ECOSYSTEMS AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE development challenges; infrastructure; resilient; sanitation; water
   supply
AB Water supply and sanitation development in developing countries specifically in Ethiopia appear to be in substantial progress. Governments, international organizations, and other organizations are contributing to the development of water supply and sanitation systems. Water supply and sanitation challenges are linked to climate change effects and the quest for climate-resilient development. This paper evaluates the current challenges in water supply and sanitation development in developing countries and infrastructure resilience. The research is based on the data collected throughout the practical development task. Some of the findings were the climate change effect and temporary adaptation mechanisms, such as intermittent supply causing further pressure variation and water loss in the system. Resilient water supply and sanitation development require an integrated approach based on practical experiences, the latest technological development in water supply and sanitation system operation and management tools, and climate change adaptation. A seamless understanding of engineering, management, and technology is required for the development and management of water supply and sanitation systems. Dispersed skills may be available that were not effective at this time, which calls for a different approach to training provision and skill development as a package on design, management, and recent technological support.
C1 [Bulti, Abebe Tadesse; Amelo, Gonse Amelo Yutura] Hawassa Univ, Dept Hydraul & Water Resources Engn, Coll Biosyst & Water Resources Engn, IoT, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
C3 Hawassa University
RP Bulti, AT (corresponding author), Hawassa Univ, Dept Hydraul & Water Resources Engn, Coll Biosyst & Water Resources Engn, IoT, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
EM abebulti@yahoo.com
RI Bulti, Abebe/AAD-3242-2022
OI BULTI, ABEBE TADESSE/0000-0001-9695-0438
CR Abubakar IR, 2019, LAND USE POLICY, V87, DOI 10.1016/j.landusepol.2019.104105
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NR 19
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 5
U2 31
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2709-8028
EI 2709-8036
J9 AQUA-UK
JI AQUA
PD JUN
PY 2023
VL 72
IS 6
BP 1057
EP 1064
DI 10.2166/aqua.2023.037
EA MAY 2023
PG 8
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA K0BJ1
UT WOS:000994514800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Corrochano-Fraile, A
   Davie, A
   Carboni, S
   Bekaert, M
AF Corrochano-Fraile, Ana
   Davie, Andrew
   Carboni, Stefano
   Bekaert, Michael
TI Evidence of multiple genome duplication events in <i>Mytilus</i>
   evolution
SO BMC GENOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Mytilus edulis; Whole-genome duplication; Evolution; Positive selection;
   Paleogenomics
ID MITOCHONDRIAL GENOMES; THERMAL ADAPTATION; PROTEIN; POLYMORPHISM;
   SPECIFICITY; ANNOTATION; EXPRESSION; SELECTION; ALIGNMENT; PROVIDES
AB Background Molluscs remain one significantly under-represented taxa amongst available genomic resources, despite being the second-largest animal phylum and the recent advances in genomes sequencing technologies and genome assembly techniques. With the present work, we want to contribute to the growing efforts by filling this gap, presenting a new high-quality reference genome for Mytilus edulis and investigating the evolutionary history within the Mytilidae family, in relation to other species in the class Bivalvia. Results Here we present, for the first time, the discovery of multiple whole genome duplication events in the Mytilidae family and, more generally, in the class Bivalvia. In addition, the calculation of evolution rates for three species of the Mytilinae subfamily sheds new light onto the taxa evolution and highlights key orthologs of interest for the study of Mytilus species divergences. Conclusions The reference genome presented here will enable the correct identification of molecular markers for evolutionary, population genetics, and conservation studies. Mytilidae have the capability to become a model shellfish for climate change adaptation using genome-enabled systems biology and multi-disciplinary studies of interactions between abiotic stressors, pathogen attacks, and aquaculture practises.
C1 [Corrochano-Fraile, Ana; Davie, Andrew; Carboni, Stefano; Bekaert, Michael] Univ Stirling, Inst Aquaculture, Fac Nat Sci, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland.
   [Carboni, Stefano] Int Marine Ctr, Loc Sa Mardini Snc, I-09170 Torre Grande, OR, Italy.
C3 University of Stirling
RP Carboni, S (corresponding author), Univ Stirling, Inst Aquaculture, Fac Nat Sci, Stirling FK9 4LA, Scotland.; Carboni, S (corresponding author), Int Marine Ctr, Loc Sa Mardini Snc, I-09170 Torre Grande, OR, Italy.
EM s.carboni@fondazioneimc.it
RI Davie, Andrew/JPL-7344-2023
OI Carboni, Stefano/0000-0002-1302-1068; Corrochano,
   Ana/0000-0002-6680-5368
FU NERC SUPER Doctoral Training Program, Fishmongers' Company, Association
   of Scottish Shellfish Growers; University of Stirling; Sustainable
   Aquaculture Innovation Centre
FX The NERC SUPER Doctoral Training Program, Fishmongers' Company,
   Association of Scottish Shellfish Growers, the Sustainable Aquaculture
   Innovation Centre, and the University of Stirling funded this work. The
   funding bodies played no role in the design of the study and collection,
   analysis, and interpretation of data and in writing the manuscript.
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NR 98
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 4
U2 18
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1471-2164
J9 BMC GENOMICS
JI BMC Genomics
PD MAY 2
PY 2022
VL 23
IS 1
AR 340
DI 10.1186/s12864-022-08575-9
PG 13
WC Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology; Genetics & Heredity
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology; Genetics & Heredity
GA 0X6YB
UT WOS:000789848100001
PM 35501689
OA Green Published, Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zobeidi, T
   Yaghoubi, J
   Yazdanpanah, M
AF Zobeidi, Tahereh
   Yaghoubi, Jafar
   Yazdanpanah, Masoud
TI Developing a paradigm model for the analysis of farmers' adaptation to
   water scarcity
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Farmers' adaptation; Water scarcity; Paradigm model; Qualitative study;
   Grounded theory; Iran
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GROUNDED THEORY; IMPACTS; AGRICULTURE;
   PERCEPTIONS; BEHAVIOR; CRISIS; CHALLENGES; MITIGATION; MANAGEMENT
AB Water scarcity poses a global threat to smallholder farmers and crops. Along with population growth, agricultural development, increased urbanization, and climate change, water scarcity is expected to worsen. Farmers' adaptation is one way to cope with the threat of water scarcity. Understanding farmers' adaptation behavior and the process of implementing adaptation is a prerequisite for designing water scarcity risk management strategies. This study, using a qualitative approach, investigated the methods of water scarcity adaptation by farmers in Khuzestan Province in southwestern Iran and the farmers' adaptation process using a paradigmatic model. Different adaptation methods were divided into categories including crop management, farm management, irrigation management, economic management, social networking, and knowledge management. The results provide a relatively comprehensive model that consists of six basic parts: understanding the causes and effects of water scarcity, the contextual and intervention factors, adaptation methods, and consequences. This paper presents a model that reflects the complex and repetitive nature of farmers' decisions and can be used by researchers, policymakers, and stakeholders to better understand and describe informed decision-making and the development of policies and interventions.
C1 [Zobeidi, Tahereh; Yaghoubi, Jafar] Zanjan Univ, Dept Agr Extens Commun & Rural Dev, Zanjan, Iran.
   [Yazdanpanah, Masoud] Agr Sci & Nat Resources Univ Khuzestan, Dept Agr Extens & Educ, Mollasani, Ahwaz, Iran.
RP Yaghoubi, J (corresponding author), Zanjan Univ, Dept Agr Extens Commun & Rural Dev, Zanjan, Iran.
EM tahereh.zobeidi@gmail.com; yaghobi@znu.ac.ir; yazdanm@asnrukh.ac.ir
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   Yaghoubi, Jafar/W-9445-2018
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   Tahereh/0000-0001-6909-4269
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NR 84
TC 25
Z9 25
U1 0
U2 18
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 24
IS 4
BP 5400
EP 5425
DI 10.1007/s10668-021-01663-y
EA JUL 2021
PG 26
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 0G5KG
UT WOS:000677943400002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ghorbani, M
   Eskandari-Damaneh, H
   Cotton, M
   Ghoochani, OM
   Borji, M
AF Ghorbani, Mehdi
   Eskandari-Damaneh, Hamed
   Cotton, Matthew
   Ghoochani, Omid M.
   Borji, Moslem
TI Harnessing indigenous knowledge for climate change-resilient water
   management - lessons from an ethnographic case study in Iran
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Indigenous knowledge; water management; Iran; climate change adaptation
ID RESOURCES
AB Through an in-depth ethnographic case study, we explore water management practices within the Jiroft County province in Iran and discuss the applicability of indigenous knowledge of regional water management to the resource governance of arid regions across the world. We explore, through qualitative analysis, the relationship between community social structure, indigenous knowledge, water management technologies and practices, and water governance rules under conditions of anthropogenic climate change. From participant observational and interview data (n = 32), we find that historically-dependent community roles establish a social contract for water distribution. Cultural conventions establish linked hierarchies of water ownership, profit-sharing and social responsibility; collectively they construct an equitable system of role-sharing, social benefit distribution, socio-ecological resilience and adaptive capacity in the face of climate change-induced drought. We conclude that the combination of hierarchical land ownership-based water distribution and what we term 'bilateral compensatory mutual assistance' for the lowest-profit agricultural water users, provides a model of spontaneous common pool resource management that bolsters community drought resilience. We use this case to proffer recommendations for adapting other centralized, grey infrastructure and regulatory models of water management from lessons learned from this spontaneous adaptive management case.
C1 [Ghorbani, Mehdi; Borji, Moslem] Univ Tehran, Fac Nat Resources, Dept Reclamat Arid & Mt Reg, Karaj, Iran.
   [Eskandari-Damaneh, Hamed] Univ Tehran, Fac Nat Resources, Dept Desertificat, Karaj, Iran.
   [Cotton, Matthew] Teesside Univ, Dept Humanities & Social Sci, Middlesbrough, Cleveland, England.
   [Ghoochani, Omid M.] Agr Sci & Nat Resources Univ Khuzestan, Fac Agr Engn & Rural Dev, Dept Agr Extens & Educ, Ahvaz, Iran.
   [Borji, Moslem] Univ Tehran, Fac Nat Resources, Dept Watershed Management, Karaj, Iran.
C3 University of Tehran; University of Tehran; University of Teesside;
   University of Tehran
RP Ghoochani, OM (corresponding author), Agr Sci & Nat Resources Univ Khuzestan, Fac Agr Engn & Rural Dev, Dept Agr Extens & Educ, Ahvaz, Iran.
EM mehrab.omid@gmail.com
RI Eskandari Damaneh, hamed/KCY-9565-2024
OI M. Ghoochani, Omid/0000-0002-4603-5386; Cotton,
   Matthew/0000-0002-8877-4822; eskandari damaneh,
   hamed/0009-0003-4137-712X
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NR 106
TC 26
Z9 28
U1 4
U2 19
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD OCT 21
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 9
SI SI
BP 766
EP 779
DI 10.1080/17565529.2020.1841601
EA JAN 2021
PG 14
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XG1XZ
UT WOS:000614823400001
OA Green Submitted, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sharifi, E
   Larbi, M
   Omrany, H
   Boland, J
AF Sharifi, Ehsan
   Larbi, Martin
   Omrany, Hossein
   Boland, John
TI Climate change adaptation and carbon emissions in green urban spaces:
   Case study of Adelaide
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Resilience; Adaptation; Urban greenery; Adelaide; Carbon
   emissions
ID ELECTRICITY DEMAND; HEAT; TEMPERATURE; RESILIENCE; CITIES
AB Concentrations of building mass and insufficient greenery in cities are identified to contribute significantly to extended heat stress in the built environment, commonly known as the urban heat island (UHI) effect. This paper presents a scenario-based modelling built on climate change projections and potential alterations of urban greenery in 2030 and 2090 in Adelaide, South Australia. The model is based on regional climate change scenarios, potential urban surface cover alternatives and resulted urban microclimate variations in Adelaide. Projected energy demand variations and corresponding carbon emission are calculated in each scenario. Results indicate that an ideal urban landscape transformation scenario with 30% tree canopy can effectively decrease the surface temperature by 1 degrees C in winter and 3 degrees C in summer by 2090. It is estimated that having greener and more heat resilient public spaces could save a total carbon emission of 140,000 tone CO2e in Adelaide annually compared to a business-as-usual scenario. Urban greenery may be used as a mean of increased urban life resilience to climate change by reducing surface temperature, increasing urban resilience and decreasing the energy demand during summer. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Sharifi, Ehsan; Larbi, Martin; Omrany, Hossein] Univ Adelaide, Sch Architecture & Built Environm, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia.
   [Boland, John] Univ South Australia, Sch Informat Technol & Math Sci, Mawson Lakes, SA 5095, Australia.
C3 University of Adelaide; University of South Australia
RP Sharifi, E (corresponding author), Univ Adelaide, Room 475,Horace Lamb Bldg,North Terrace Campus, Adelaide, SA 5000, Australia.
EM ehsan.sharifi@adelaide.edu.au; amartin.larbi@adelaide.edu.au;
   hossein.omrany@adelaide.edu.au; john.boland@unisa.edu.au
RI Sharifi, Ehsan/KCK-7717-2024; Boland, John/B-3046-2008; Sharifi,
   Ehsan/P-1402-2016
OI Boland, John/0000-0003-1132-7589; Sharifi, Ehsan/0000-0003-1309-925X
FU CRC LCL; City of Adelaide
FX This study is linked to the Urban Microclimates project (RP 2005),
   facilitated by the CRC for Low Carbon Living. It is supported by the CRC
   LCL's partners including the City of Adelaide. Methods compliance with
   Australian Code for the Responsible Conduct of Research is approved by
   UniSA's Human Research Ethics Committee in 2013 (PR 31464).
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Z9 45
U1 28
U2 193
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD MAY 1
PY 2020
VL 254
AR 120035
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.120035
PG 9
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA KT3BV
UT WOS:000518890800022
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sarker, MNI
   Yang, B
   Lv, Y
   Huq, ME
   Kamruzzaman, MM
AF Sarker, Md Nazirul Islam
   Yang, Bo
   Lv, Yang
   Huq, Md Enamul
   Kamruzzaman, M. M.
TI Climate Change Adaptation and Resilience through Big Data
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED COMPUTER SCIENCE AND APPLICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Disaster resilience; administrative resilience; community resilience;
   disaster management; environmental management
ID SOCIAL MEDIA DATA; DISASTER MANAGEMENT; VULNERABILITY; AGRICULTURE;
   ANALYTICS; FRAMEWORK; SENTIMENT; RECOVERY; SYSTEMS; TRACK
AB The adverse effect of climate change is gradually increasing all over the world and developing countries are more sufferer. The potential of big data can be an effective tool to make an appropriate adaptation strategy and enhance the resilience of the people. This study aims to explore the potential of big data for taking proper strategy against climate change effects as well as enhance people's resilience in the face of the adverse effect of climate change. A systematic literature review has been conducted in the last ten years of existing kinds of literature. This study argues that resilience is a process of bounce back to the previous condition after facing any adverse effect. It also focuses on the integrated function of the adaptive, absorptive and transformative capacity of a social unit such as individual, community or state for facing any natural disaster. Big data technologies have the capacity to show the information regarding upcoming issues, current issues and recovery stages of the adverse effect of climate change. The findings of this study will enable policymakers and related stakeholders to take appropriate adaptation strategies for enhancing the resilience of the people of the affected areas.
C1 [Sarker, Md Nazirul Islam] Neijiang Normal Univ, Sch Polit Sci & Publ Adm, Neijiang, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Bo] Sichuan Radio & TV Univ, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Bo; Lv, Yang] Sichuan Univ, Sch Publ Adm, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
   [Huq, Md Enamul] Wuhan Univ, State Key Lab Informat Engn Surveying Mapping & R, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Kamruzzaman, M. M.] Jouf Univ, Dept Comp & Informat Sci, Sakaka, Al Jouf, Saudi Arabia.
C3 Neijiang Normal University; Sichuan University; Wuhan University; Al
   Jouf University
RP Yang, B (corresponding author), Sichuan Radio & TV Univ, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
RI Huq, Md/AAP-5660-2020; Sarker, Md Nazirul Islam/K-7928-2018;
   Kamruzzaman, M.M./F-6702-2011
OI Yang, Bo/0000-0002-4070-266X; Kamruzzaman, M.M./0000-0001-8464-1523;
   Sarker, Md Nazirul Islam/0000-0002-8887-521X; Lv,
   Yang/0000-0001-6153-715X; Yang, Bo/0000-0003-2103-9310; Huq, Md.
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NR 46
TC 28
Z9 29
U1 1
U2 23
PU SCIENCE & INFORMATION SAI ORGANIZATION LTD
PI WEST YORKSHIRE
PA 19 BOLLING RD, BRADFORD, WEST YORKSHIRE, 00000, ENGLAND
SN 2158-107X
EI 2156-5570
J9 INT J ADV COMPUT SC
JI Int. J. Adv. Comput. Sci. Appl.
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 11
IS 3
BP 533
EP 539
PG 7
WC Computer Science, Theory & Methods
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Computer Science
GA LA6AS
UT WOS:000524029200068
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Georgeson, L
   Maslin, M
   Poessinouw, M
   Howard, S
AF Georgeson, Lucien
   Maslin, Mark
   Poessinouw, Martyn
   Howard, Steve
TI Adaptation responses to climate change differ between global megacities
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
AB Urban areas are increasingly at risk from climate change, with negative impacts predicted for human health, the economy and ecosystems(1,2). These risks require responses from cities to improve their resilience. Policymakers need to understand current adaptation spend to plan comprehensively and effectively. Through the measurement of spend in the newly defined 'adaptation economy', we analyse current climate change adaptation efforts in ten megacities. In all cases, the adaptation economy remains a small part of the overall economy, representing a maximum of 0.33% of a city's gross domestic product (here referred to as GDPc). Differences in total spend are significant between cities in developed, emerging and developing countries, ranging from 15 pound million to 1,600 pound million. Comparing key subsectors, we demonstrate the differences in adaptation profiles. Developing cities have higher proportional spend on health and agriculture, whereas developed cities have higher spend on energy and water. Spend per capita and percentage of GDPc comparisons more clearly show disparities between cities. Developing country cities spend half the proportion of GDPc and significantly less per capita, suggesting that adaptation spend is driven by wealth rather than the number of vulnerable people. This indicates that current adaptation activities are insufficient in major population centres in developing and emerging economies.
C1 [Georgeson, Lucien; Maslin, Mark; Poessinouw, Martyn] UCL, Dept Geog, Pearson Bldg,Gower St, London WC1E 6BT, England.
   [Poessinouw, Martyn; Howard, Steve] KMatrix Ltd, Greetham House, Greetham LE15 7NF, Rutland, England.
C3 University of London; University College London
RP Georgeson, L (corresponding author), UCL, Dept Geog, Pearson Bldg,Gower St, London WC1E 6BT, England.
EM lucien.georgeson.13@ucl.ac.uk
OI Maslin, Mark/0000-0001-9957-3463
FU ESRC; NERC [ES/J500185/1]; Royal Society; GLA; Defra; BIS; ESRC
   [ES/J500185/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX The authors would like to thank S. Smith (Department of Economics,
   University College London) for detailed comments and suggestions on the
   study, and the London Climate Change Partnership, W. Distaso (Imperial
   College London), Ricardo-AEA, the Greater London Authority, Defra,
   Triple E Consulting, S. Surminski (London School of Economics), and A.
   Townsend (Climate Change Committee) for their input in developing the
   definition of climate change adaptation activities. We would like to
   thank the following organizations for financially supporting this
   project: L.G.; ESRC and NERC (grant number ES/J500185/1), M.M.; Royal
   Society Industrial Fellowship, M.P. and S.H.; GLA, Defra and BIS.
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NR 33
TC 65
Z9 69
U1 7
U2 81
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2016
VL 6
IS 6
BP 584
EP +
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE2944
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DM6ZC
UT WOS:000376500600012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rapaport, E
   Manuel, P
   Krawchenko, T
   Keefe, J
AF Rapaport, Eric
   Manuel, Patricia
   Krawchenko, Tamara
   Keefe, Janice
TI How Can Aging Communities Adapt to Coastal Climate Change? Planning for
   Both Social and Place Vulnerability
SO CANADIAN PUBLIC POLICY-ANALYSE DE POLITIQUES
LA English
DT Article
DE coastal climate change; population aging; community vulnerability; aging
   in place; municipal policy; Nova Scotia
ID GOVERNANCE; SERVICES; CAPACITY; IMPACT
AB Coastal climate change in the form of rising sea levels and more frequent and extreme weather events can threaten community assets, residences, and infrastructure. This presents a particular concern for vulnerable residents such as seniors aged 75 years and older. Our spatial study combines census area cohort population model projections, community asset mapping, and a municipal policy review with coastal sea rise scenarios to the year 2025-2026. This integrated information provides the basis to assess the vulnerability of our case study communities in Nova Scotia, Canada. Nova Scotia has the oldest population of any Canadian province, the majority of whom reside in coastal communities on the Atlantic, making it an ideal site for such analysis. Through this work we forward a useful decision-making support tool for policy and planning one that can help coastal communities respond to the particular needs of seniors in rural areas and adapt to impacts of coastal climate change. Throughout we argue that social vulnerability must be considered alongside place vulnerability in the design of climate change adaptation and mitigation efforts. This is not just an issue for coastal communities, but for all communities facing the effects of extreme weather events.
C1 [Rapaport, Eric; Manuel, Patricia] Dalhousie Univ, Sch Planning, Halifax, NS, Canada.
   [Krawchenko, Tamara; Keefe, Janice] Mt St Vincent Univ, Dept Family Studies & Gerontol, Halifax, NS B3M 2J6, Canada.
C3 Dalhousie University; Mount Saint Vincent University
RP Rapaport, E (corresponding author), Dalhousie Univ, Sch Planning, Halifax, NS, Canada.
RI Krawchenko, Tamara/AAY-4396-2020
OI Krawchenko, Tamara/0000-0002-1401-0475
FU Nova Scotia Department of Environment; Public Health Agency of Canada;
   Nova Scotia Department of Seniors
FX The authors gratefully acknowledge the funding provided by the Nova
   Scotia Department of Environment, the Public Health Agency of Canada,
   and the Nova Scotia Department of Seniors. The authors also acknowledge
   the research and technical assistance of Dr. Judith Godin, Jennifer
   Strang, Lama Haj Issa, Megan O'Hara, and Siobhan Witherbee.
CR Alexander M., 2010, CAPHAZ NET WP4 REPOR
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NR 46
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 3
U2 40
PU UNIV TORONTO PRESS INC
PI TORONTO
PA JOURNALS DIVISION, 5201 DUFFERIN ST, DOWNSVIEW, TORONTO, ON M3H 5T8,
   CANADA
SN 0317-0861
EI 1911-9917
J9 CAN PUBLIC POL
JI Can. Public Policy-Anal. Polit.
PD JUN
PY 2015
VL 41
IS 2
BP 166
EP 177
DI 10.3138/cpp.2014-055
PG 12
WC Economics; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Public Administration
GA CL8PV
UT WOS:000357237500006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fallon, DSM
   Sullivan, CA
AF Fallon, Dale S. M.
   Sullivan, Caroline A.
TI Are We There Yet? NSW local governments' progress on climate change
SO AUSTRALIAN GEOGRAPHER
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; greenhouse; Local government; adaptation;
   municipalities; emissions sustainability; policy
ID CHANGE POLICY; ADAPTATION; AUSTRALIA; LIMITS
AB Local governments are responding to top-down policy initiatives from both federal and State governments to reduce emissions, and adapt to any potential impacts of climate change. Although climate change is clearly a global problem, many of the solutions will be implemented at the local level. To explore this issue, the aim of this research was to examine regional variation in climate change response across New South Wales (NSW). To this end, between September 2010 and September 2011, we reviewed publicly available council and regional documentations for all NSW councils. The indicators of response examined were based on the NSW Greenhouse Plan (2005). These were awareness-raising, emissions reduction and adaptation planning. It was found that councils were undertaking many practical projects to fulfil the goals of this plan. As a result, they are abating significant quantities of emissions. Adaptation is progressing through the development of risk-based climate change adaptation plans. Councils are addressing particular areas of management, such as water management, assisted by guidelines which incorporate consideration for climate change as part of best practice. While overall responses to this threat are progressing, a distinct urban bias in action has been observed, due to biases in policy and funding arrangements.
C1 [Fallon, Dale S. M.; Sullivan, Caroline A.] So Cross Univ, Sch Environm Sci & Engn, Lismore, NSW 2482, Australia.
C3 Southern Cross University
RP Fallon, DSM (corresponding author), So Cross Univ, Sch Environm Sci & Engn, Lismore, NSW 2482, Australia.
EM dalefallon10@hotmail.com
RI Sullivan, Caroline A./T-8668-2017
OI Sullivan, Caroline A./0000-0001-8486-0523
CR Allen Consulting Group, 2005, CLIM CHANG RISK VULN
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   New South Wales Government, 2005, EN SAV ORD 2005
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NR 45
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 23
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0004-9182
EI 1465-3311
J9 AUST GEOGR
JI Aust. Geogr.
PD APR 3
PY 2014
VL 45
IS 2
BP 221
EP 238
DI 10.1080/00049182.2014.899030
PG 18
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA AH0YN
UT WOS:000335846800008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Flint, MM
   Baker, JW
   Billington, SL
AF Flint, Madeleine M.
   Baker, Jack W.
   Billington, Sarah L.
TI A modular framework for performance-based durability engineering: From
   exposure to impacts
SO STRUCTURAL SAFETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Durability; Sustainability; Performance-based engineering
ID REINFORCED-CONCRETE STRUCTURES; STEEL CORROSION; MAINTENANCE; MODEL
AB A modular framework for assessing the economic, environmental, and social impacts of structural durability has been proposed and applied to a concrete structure expected to undergo climate-change-accelerated chloride-induced reinforcement corrosion. The proposed performance-based durability engineering (PBDE) framework comprehensively considers uncertainty, accommodates non-stationary exposure, and computes quantitative sustainability metrics. Drawing on previous work in the nuclear risk and earthquake engineering communities, PBDE's three analysis stages are de-coupled at pinch-points, allowing the use of a convolution integral to link uncertainty in exposure, deterioration and repair, and sustainability impacts. The convolution-based methodology for the PBDE framework has been compared with traditional Monte Carlo simulation. Results of the convolution approach were statistically equivalent to brute-force Monte Carlo analysis using the same number of simulations, and the convolution approach has advantages in deaggregation, backwards conditioning, and updating of results to reflect new information or models. Limitations of the convolution approach are discussed, as are possible techniques for decreasing computational expense and areas for future work. Potential applications for PBDE include design code calibration, decision support for climate change adaptation policy, and sensitivity assessment to direct research. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Flint, Madeleine M.; Baker, Jack W.; Billington, Sarah L.] Stanford Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
C3 Stanford University
RP Flint, MM (corresponding author), Stanford Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Stanford, CA 94305 USA.
EM flint@stanford.edu; bakerjw@stanford.edu; billington@stanford.edu
RI ; Baker, Jack/F-2495-2010
OI Flint, Madeleine/0000-0002-1820-6694; Billington,
   Sarah/0000-0003-3796-587X; Baker, Jack/0000-0003-2744-9599
FU National Science Foundation; Stanford Gabilan Graduate Fellowship; John
   A. Blume Earthquake Engineering Center at Stanford University; UPS
   Foundation at Stanford University
FX The authors thank Mette Geiker and Alexander Michel for their assistance
   with deterioration modeling and developing reasonable deterioration and
   repair assumptions. Jan-Magnus Ostvik, Claus Larsen, Arne Gussias,
   Ragnhild Relling, and Knut Grefstad are acknowledged for their help in
   selecting repair strategies and developing estimates of repair impacts.
   Hans Janssen is thanked for sharing his Latin hypercube optimization
   routine. Additionally, this work was made possible by the following
   funding: the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship
   Program and Nordic Research Opportunity, the Stanford Gabilan Graduate
   Fellowship, the John A. Blume Earthquake Engineering Center at Stanford
   University, and the UPS Foundation at Stanford University.
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NR 56
TC 18
Z9 24
U1 0
U2 20
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0167-4730
EI 1879-3355
J9 STRUCT SAF
JI Struct. Saf.
PY 2014
VL 50
BP 78
EP 93
DI 10.1016/j.strusafe.2014.03.003
PG 16
WC Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering
GA AN1JC
UT WOS:000340337600008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Di Marino, M
   Cucca, R
   Thaler, T
   Bügelmayer-Blaschek, M
AF Di Marino, Mina
   Cucca, Roberta
   Thaler, Thomas
   Bugelmayer-Blaschek, Marianne
TI Interlinking the silos: How to stimulate a new debate on more greenery
   in cities
SO URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban green; Urban trees; Ecosystem services; Nature-based solutions;
   Green infrastructure; Green gentrification; Urban planning;
   Environmental justice
ID URBAN; GENTRIFICATION; JUSTICE
AB To address the current and future impacts of climate change on urban inhabitants, the development and benefits of urban green areas have been widely investigated - including parks, open unsealed spaces, residential gardens and street trees. However, the provision of urban green spaces can be used by private developers or privatepublic partnerships as a marketing tool to increase real-estate values. This presents a disadvantage for lowincome households who may not be able to stay where they are or move to buildings or areas less affected by heat waves. Another key challenge reflects land-use conflicts created by the need to plant more trees, as opposed to other urban needs such as more parking spaces. At present, in several cities, policy and planning instruments remain inadequate in providing enough green spaces such as urban trees to lessen the heat stress in cities (for example, in poorer neighborhoods and new urban transformations led by private developers). The need for the proliferation of urban trees faces multiple expectations and challenges from several perspectives: 1) the crucial need for adaptation to climate change; 2) the partial presence (or total absence) of trees in areas undergoing densification and future transformations to readdress within effective planning strategies and tools; and 3) the relevance of social consequences (counteracting socio-spatial inequalities and considering residents' perspectives) linked to green gentrification and environmental justice. The aim of this paper is to investigate these three perspectives (which are currently independent, for the most part), in order to interlink the silos and address the need for an interdisciplinary perspective of trees in urban areas. We suggest that the integration of these three aspects would help us fill the current knowledge gaps and enable a comprehensive perspective on social and environmental policies required in the complex urban system, and therefore also encourage new research paths, as well as a higher social acceptance by homeowners and renters.
C1 [Di Marino, Mina; Cucca, Roberta] Norwegian Univ Life Sci, Fac Landscape & Soc, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, N-1432 As, Norway.
   [Thaler, Thomas] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, Inst Landscape Planning, Dept Landscape Spatial & Infrastruct Sci, A-1180 Vienna, Austria.
   [Bugelmayer-Blaschek, Marianne] AIT Austrian Inst Technol, Ctr Energy, A-2444 Seibersdorf, Austria.
C3 Norwegian University of Life Sciences; BOKU University; Austrian
   Institute of Technology (AIT)
RP Di Marino, M (corresponding author), Norwegian Univ Life Sci, Fac Landscape & Soc, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, N-1432 As, Norway.
EM mina.di.marino@nmbu.no
RI Thaler, Thomas/O-7112-2014; cucca, roberta/ABE-3554-2021
OI Bugelmayer-Blaschek, Marianne/0000-0001-5475-5503; Di Marino,
   Mina/0000-0001-9799-6083; cucca, roberta/0000-0002-1419-0330
FU Vienna Science and Technology Fund (WWTF)
FX This article has been funded by the Vienna Science and Technology Fund
   (WWTF) [10.47379/ESR20011] within the SENSUS project "The social
   equality of Nature-based Solutions to urban heat stress".
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NR 46
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 3
U2 28
PU ELSEVIER GMBH
PI MUNICH
PA HACKERBRUCKE 6, 80335 MUNICH, GERMANY
SN 1618-8667
EI 1610-8167
J9 URBAN FOR URBAN GREE
JI Urban For. Urban Green.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 87
AR 128065
DI 10.1016/j.ufug.2023.128065
EA AUG 2023
PG 5
WC Plant Sciences; Environmental Studies; Forestry; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Plant Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Forestry; Urban
   Studies
GA R5SU7
UT WOS:001064957900001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Branchereau, C
   Hardner, C
   Dirlewanger, E
   Wenden, B
   Le Dantec, L
   Alletru, D
   Parmentier, J
   Ivancic, A
   Giovannini, D
   Brandi, F
   Lopez-Ortega, G
   Garcia-Montiel, F
   Quilot-Turion, B
   Quero-García, J
AF Branchereau, Camille
   Hardner, Craig
   Dirlewanger, Elisabeth
   Wenden, Benedicte
   Le Dantec, Loick
   Alletru, David
   Parmentier, Julien
   Ivancic, Anton
   Giovannini, Daniela
   Brandi, Federica
   Lopez-Ortega, Gregorio
   Garcia-Montiel, Federico
   Quilot-Turion, Benedicte
   Quero-Garcia, Jose
TI Genotype-by-environment and QTL-by-environment interactions in sweet
   cherry (<i>Prunus avium</i> L.) for flowering date
SO FRONTIERS IN PLANT SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE sweet cherry; flowering; genotype-by-environment interactions; QTL;
   QTL-by-environment interactions
ID PHENOLOGICAL TRAITS; GENETIC DETERMINISM; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PEACH; FRUIT;
   CHILL
AB In sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.), flowering date is strongly dependent on the environment conditions and, therefore, is a trait of major interest for adaptation to climate change. Such trait can be influenced by genotype-by-environment interaction (GxE), that refers to differences in the response of genotypes to different environments. If not taken into account, GxE can reduce selection accuracy and overall genetic gain. However, little is known about GxE in fruit tree species. Flowering date is a highly heritable and polygenic trait for which many quantitative trait loci (QTLs) have been identified. As for the overall genetic performance, differential expression of QTLs in response to environment (QTL-by-environment interaction, QTLxE) can occur. The present study is based on the analysis of a multi-environment trial (MET) suitable for the study of GxE and QTLxE in sweet cherry. It consists of a sweet cherry F-1 full-sib family (n = 121) derived from the cross between cultivars 'Regina' and 'Lapins' and planted in two copies in five locations across four European countries (France, Italy, Slovenia and Spain) covering a large range of climatic conditions. The aim of this work was to study the effect of the environment on flowering date and estimate GxE, to carry QTL detection in different environments in order to study the QTL stability across environments and to estimate QTLxE. A strong effect of the environment on flowering date and its genetic control was highlighted. Two large-effect and environment-specific QTLs with significant QTLxE were identified on linkage groups (LGs) 1 and 4. This work gives new insights into the effect of the environment on a trait of main importance in one of the most economically important fruit crops in temperate regions. Moreover, molecular markers were developed for flowering date and a strategy consisting in using specific markers for warm or cold regions was proposed to optimize marker-assisted selection (MAS) in sweet cherry breeding programs.
C1 [Branchereau, Camille; Dirlewanger, Elisabeth; Wenden, Benedicte; Le Dantec, Loick; Quero-Garcia, Jose] Univ Bordeaux, Unite Mixte Rech Biol Fruit & Pathol UMR BFP, INRAE, Villenave Dornon, France.
   [Hardner, Craig] Univ Queensland, Queensland Alliance Agr & Food Innovat, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Alletru, David; Parmentier, Julien] INRAE, Unite Expt UE 0393, Unite Expt Arboricole, Toulenne, France.
   [Ivancic, Anton] Univ Maribor, Fac Agr & Life Sci, Hoce, Slovenia.
   [Giovannini, Daniela; Brandi, Federica] Consiglio Ric Agr & Anal Econ Agr CREA, Res Ctr Olive Fruit & Citrus Crops, Forli, Italy.
   [Lopez-Ortega, Gregorio] Atlantic Green, Ctra Almonde Rocio, Huelva, Spain.
   [Garcia-Montiel, Federico] Inst Murciano Invest & Desarrollo Agr & Alimentar, Murcia, Spain.
   [Quilot-Turion, Benedicte] INRAE, Unite Rech UR 1052 GAFL, Montfavet, Montfavet, France.
C3 Universite de Bordeaux; INRAE; University of Queensland; INRAE;
   University of Maribor; Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e
   L'analisi Dell'economia Agraria (CREA); INRAE
RP Dirlewanger, E; Quero-García, J (corresponding author), Univ Bordeaux, Unite Mixte Rech Biol Fruit & Pathol UMR BFP, INRAE, Villenave Dornon, France.
EM elisabeth.dirlewanger@inrae.fr
RI Wenden, Bénédicte/P-9519-2019; Giovannini, Daniela/AAP-6197-2020;
   Quilot, Benedicte/H-9106-2016
OI Quilot, Benedicte/0000-0003-4095-1399
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NR 44
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 5
U2 22
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
SN 1664-462X
J9 FRONT PLANT SCI
JI Front. Plant Sci.
PD MAR 2
PY 2023
VL 14
AR 1142974
DI 10.3389/fpls.2023.1142974
PG 16
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA 9W5JV
UT WOS:000949114300001
PM 36938044
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wijsman, K
   Auyeung, DSN
   Brashear, P
   Branco, BF
   Graziano, K
   Groffman, PM
   Cheng, HE
   Corbett, D
AF Wijsman, Katinka
   Auyeung, D. S. Novem
   Brashear, Pippa
   Branco, Brett F.
   Graziano, Kathryn
   Groffman, Peter M.
   Cheng, Helen
   Corbett, Dylan
TI Operationalizing resilience: co-creating a framework to monitor hard,
   natural, and nature-based shoreline features in New York State
SO ECOLOGY AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE co-creation; indicators; monitoring; nature-based solutions; New York
   State; operationalization; resilience
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; KNOWLEDGE COPRODUCTION; ESTUARINE SHORELINES;
   DECISION-MAKING; COASTAL DEFENSE; PUGET-SOUND; SCIENCE; CONSERVATION;
   GOVERNANCE; PROTECTION
AB There is growing interest in the application of nature-based solutions to adapt to climate change and promote resilience, yet barriers exist to their implementation. These include a perceived lack of evidence of their functioning in comparison to conventional solutions and an inability for existing design, policy, and assessment processes to capture the multiple benefits of these solutions. Positing this as a challenge of operationalizing and measuring resilience, we argue that the concept of resilience needs to be given concrete meaning in applied management contexts. Starting with shoreline vulnerability as a policy problem and natural and nature-based shoreline features as a promising solution, we present a case study of a co-creative process to produce an interdisciplinary and locally relevant approach to understanding and capturing the benefits of natural and nature-based solutions. We develop the notion of resilience service to enable a concreteness to resilience that simultaneously takes into account ecological, technical, and social dimensions. Through the co-creative process, our researcher-practitioner network developed a monitoring framework for shoreline features in New York State to facilitate the comparison of natural and nature-based features with conventional shoreline approaches. We describe the process and assess the advantages and drawbacks of integrating scientific input and local knowledge. We present the monitoring framework, showing how the co-creative character of the process is consequential in the formulation of the final framework through the selection of parameters, indicators, and protocols. We argue that interdisciplinarity, co-creation, pragmatism, multi-scalar applicability, and policy relevance are critical principles to understand the functioning and facilitate the implementation of naturebased solutions, while recognizing that this work necessitates compromise and as such will lead to continued deliberation. We posit this is a strength of the process for it acknowledges the creation of resilience as a social process in which values are central and subject to change.
C1 [Wijsman, Katinka] Urban Syst Lab, New Sch, New York, NY 10003 USA.
   [Auyeung, D. S. Novem] New York City Dept Pk & Recreat, New York, NY USA.
   [Brashear, Pippa] SCAPE Landscape Architecture, New York, NY USA.
   [Branco, Brett F.] Brooklyn Coll, Sci & Resilience Inst Jamaica Bay, New York, NY USA.
   [Branco, Brett F.] CUNY, Earth & Environm Sci, Grad Ctr, New York, NY USA.
   [Graziano, Kathryn; Cheng, Helen] New York Sea Grant, New York, NY USA.
   [Groffman, Peter M.] CUNY, Adv Sci Res Ctr, Grad Ctr, New York, NY USA.
   [Groffman, Peter M.] Cary Inst Ecosyst Studies, Millbrook, NY USA.
   [Cheng, Helen] Northeastern Univ, Dept Marine & Environm Sci, Boston, MA USA.
   [Corbett, Dylan] Arcadis US, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
C3 The New School; City University of New York (CUNY) System; Brooklyn
   College (CUNY); City University of New York (CUNY) System; City
   University of New York (CUNY) System; Cary Institute of Ecosystem
   Studies; Northeastern University
RP Wijsman, K (corresponding author), Urban Syst Lab, New Sch, New York, NY 10003 USA.
RI Branco, Brett/B-4012-2008
OI Branco, Brett/0000-0002-2774-1488; Cheng, Helen/0000-0002-9263-1349;
   Auyeung, D. S. Novem/0000-0002-4038-3865
FU National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) [NA16NOS4190155];
   NYSERDA; National Science Foundation [SES 1444755]; Bernard and Anne
   Spitzer Charitable Trust
FX We are grateful for the generous and constructive feedback provided by
   an anonymous reviewer on an earlier iteration of this work. Funding for
   this research was provided by NYSDOS through an award from the National
   Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA Award NA16NOS4190155); and
   NYSERDA. NYSDOS and NYSERDA have not reviewed the information contained
   herein, and the results and conclusions, as well as any views or
   opinions expressed in this article, are those of the authors and do not
   necessarily reflect the views of NYSDOS, NOAA, NYSERDA or the State of
   New York. Katinka Wijsman's contributions were supported by the National
   Science Foundation under Grant Number SES 1444755. Support for this
   project was also made available by the Bernard and Anne Spitzer
   Charitable Trust. We thank all the participants from the regional
   working groups, the technical working groups, the permit reviewers, and
   the project advisory committee for contributing their time and expertise
   in workshops and webinars. We are grateful for help from student
   research assistants and volunteers who made it possible to conduct the
   pilot monitoring. We thank the members of the core team for their
   collaboration and want to thank the following core team members for
   input and feedback on earlier drafts of this article: Bennett Brooks,
   Katherine BuntingHowarth, Carolyn Fraioli, Christopher Haight, Marit
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NR 102
TC 7
Z9 9
U1 6
U2 40
PU RESILIENCE ALLIANCE
PI WOLFVILLE
PA ACADIA UNIV, BIOLOGY DEPT, WOLFVILLE, NS B0P 1X0, CANADA
SN 1708-3087
J9 ECOL SOC
JI Ecol. Soc.
PD OCT
PY 2021
VL 26
IS 3
AR 10
DI 10.5751/ES-12182-260310
PG 21
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA WI7EA
UT WOS:000708519300002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mhlanga, B
   Ercoli, L
   Pellegrino, E
   Onofri, A
   Thierfelder, C
AF Mhlanga, Blessing
   Ercoli, Laura
   Pellegrino, Elisa
   Onofri, Andrea
   Thierfelder, Christian
TI The crucial role of mulch to enhance the stability and resilience of
   cropping systems in southern Africa
SO AGRONOMY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainable intensification; No-tillage; Southern Africa; Conservation
   agriculture; Yield stability
ID CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE PRACTICES; ZEA-MAYS; STATISTICAL-ANALYSIS;
   SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; YIELD STABILITY; CLIMATE STRESS; MAIZE YIELD;
   ADOPTION; BIODIVERSITY; TEMPERATURE
AB Conservation agriculture has been promoted to sustainably intensify food production in smallholder farming systems in southern Africa. However, farmers have rarely fully implemented all its components, resulting in different combinations of no-tillage, crop rotation, and permanent soil cover being practiced, thus resulting in variable yield responses depending on climatic and soil conditions. Therefore, it is crucial to assess the effect of conservation agriculture components on yield stability. We hypothesized that the use of all three conservation agriculture components would perform the best, resulting in more stable production in all environments. We evaluated at, eight trial locations across southern Africa, how partial and full implementation of these components affected crop yield and yield stability compared with conventional tillage alone or combined with mulching and/or crop rotation. Grain yield and shoot biomass of maize and cowpea were recorded along with precipitation for 2 to 5 years. Across different environments, the addition of crop rotation and mulch to no-tillage increased maize grain by 6%, and the same practices added to conventional tillage led to 13% yield increase. Conversely, adding only mulch or crop rotation to no-tillage or conventional tillage led to lower or equal maize yield. Stability analyses based on Shukla's index showed for the first time that the most stable systems are those in which mulch is added without crop rotation. Moreover, the highest yielding systems were the least stable. Finally, additive main effects and multiplicative interaction analysis allowed clarifying that mulch added to no-tillage gives stable yields on sandy soil with high rainfall. Similarly, mulch added to conventional tillage gives stable yield on sandy soil, but under low rainfall. This is the first study that highlighted the crucial role of mulch to enhance the stability and resilience of cropping systems in southern Africa, supporting their adaptability to climate change.
C1 [Mhlanga, Blessing; Ercoli, Laura; Pellegrino, Elisa] Scuola Super Sant Anna, Inst Life Sci, BioLabs, Pisa, Italy.
   [Onofri, Andrea] Univ Perugia, Dipartimento Sci Agr Alimentari & Ambientali, Perugia, Italy.
   [Thierfelder, Christian] Southern Africa Reg Off SARO, Int Maize & Wheat Improvement Ctr CIMMYT, Harare, Zimbabwe.
C3 Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna; University of Perugia
RP Mhlanga, B (corresponding author), Scuola Super Sant Anna, Inst Life Sci, BioLabs, Pisa, Italy.
EM b.mhlanga@santannapisa.it
RI ONOFRI, Andrea/D-1029-2016; Pellegrino, Elisa/X-2040-2019; Thierfelder,
   Christian/J-3989-2019; Pellegrino, Elisa/B-5091-2011
OI Pellegrino, Elisa/0000-0002-2482-1327; Mhlanga,
   Blessing/0000-0003-4587-795X
FU Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna within the CRUI-CAREAgreement; USAID
   [EEMG-00-04-00013, AID-BFS-G-11-00002]; Bundesministerium fur
   wirtschaftliche Zumsammenarbeit (BMZ/GIZ) [13.22.44.5-002.00,
   13.9767.8-002.00]; International Fund for Agriculture Development (IFAD)
   [1309]
FX Open access funding provided by Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna within the
   CRUI-CAREAgreement. Funding for these trials was received through a
   range of financing agreements including the USAID-funded Feed the Future
   projects, Sustainable Intensification in Maize-Legume Systems in Eastern
   Province of Zambia (SIMLEZA, Grant No. EEMG-00-04-00013), and Africa
   Research in Sustainable Intensification for the Next Generation (Africa
   RISING, AID-BFS-G-11-00002); grants from the Bundesministerium fur
   wirtschaftliche Zumsammenarbeit (BMZ/GIZ Grant No. 13.22.44.5-002.00 and
   13.9767.8-002.00), and the International Fund for Agriculture
   Development (IFAD, Grant No. 1309).
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NR 62
TC 21
Z9 22
U1 0
U2 15
PU SPRINGER FRANCE
PI PARIS
PA 22 RUE DE PALESTRO, PARIS, 75002, FRANCE
SN 1774-0746
EI 1773-0155
J9 AGRON SUSTAIN DEV
JI Agron. Sustain. Dev.
PD APR
PY 2021
VL 41
IS 2
AR 29
DI 10.1007/s13593-021-00687-y
PG 14
WC Agronomy; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA RK2HI
UT WOS:000638121900001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gavinet, J
   Vilagrosa, A
   Chirino, E
   Granados, ME
   Vallejo, VR
   Prévosto, B
AF Gavinet, Jordane
   Vilagrosa, Alberto
   Chirino, Esteban
   Elena Granados, Maria
   Ramon Vallejo, V.
   Prevosto, Bernard
TI Hardwood seedling establishment below Aleppo pine depends on thinning
   intensity in two Mediterranean sites
SO ANNALS OF FOREST SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Ecological restoration; Tree shelter; Microclimate; Shade-drought
   interaction; Soil moisture; Underplanting oak
ID SOIL-MOISTURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; FOREST STAND; SURVIVAL; GROWTH;
   REGENERATION; PLANTATIONS; HALEPENSIS; MANAGEMENT; DIVERSITY
AB Key message Aleppo pine stands can be made more resilient to disturbances such as forest fires, by introducing native and resprouting hardwood species. Pine density impacts seedling establishment by modifying resource availability and abiotic stress. Under Mediterranean conditions, moderate thinning (15-20 m (2) /ha) was the most effective in promoting the establishment and growth of a number of hardwood species.
   Context Developing silvicultural methods to help Mediterranean forests adapt to climate change is of high importance. Introducing resprouting hardwood species below pine stands is expected to promote diversity and resilience of these stands, particularly to forest fires.
   Aims The aim of this study was to examine how the intensity of pine thinning influences understory microenvironment and the establishment of various hardwood seedlings in two Mediterranean sites.
   Methods Aleppo pine stands were thinned down to three levels of basal area (uncut 30 m(2)/ha, moderate thinning 13-20 m(2)/ha, heavy thinning 7-10 m(2)/ha) at two Mediterranean sites (South-East France and South-East Spain). Seedlings of six hardwood species were introduced in the understory, and their survival and growth were monitored and related to changes in microenvironment induced by thinning.
   Results At both sites, thinning improved light availability and seedling diameter increment of all target species. Thinning increased extreme temperature and evaporative demand. Heavy thinning increased summer soil moisture in SE Spain but not in SE France. The worst conditions for seedling survival were reached under uncut stands in SE France and low-density stands in SE Spain.
   Conclusion Thinning in pine stands accelerated seedling growth, but excessive thinning worsened summer drought and affected seedling survival. Moderate thinning (15-20 m(2)/ha) seems to be the best option in support of the introduction of hardwoods in the understory, which can improve forest diversity and resilience in the future.
C1 [Gavinet, Jordane; Prevosto, Bernard] Inst Natl Rech Sci & Technol Environm & Agr, IRSTEA, F-13100 Aix En Provence, France.
   [Vilagrosa, Alberto; Chirino, Esteban] CEAM, Valencia 46980, Spain.
   [Elena Granados, Maria] Univ Michoacana, Inst Invest Recursos Nat, Dept Bot, Morelia 58337, Michoacan, Mexico.
   [Ramon Vallejo, V.] Univ Barcelona, Dept Biol Vegetal, E-08028 Barcelona, Spain.
   [Gavinet, Jordane] Aix Marseille Univ, CNRS, IRD, Inst Mediterraneen Biodiversite Ecol Marine & Con, F-13331 Marseille 3, France.
C3 INRAE; Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; University of
   Barcelona; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Institut
   de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Aix-Marseille Universite
RP Gavinet, J (corresponding author), Inst Natl Rech Sci & Technol Environm & Agr, IRSTEA, 3275 Route Cezanne, F-13100 Aix En Provence, France.
EM jordane.gavinet@irstea.fr; a.vilagrosa@ua.es; Esteban.Chirino@ua.es;
   marihelena17@gmail.com; vvallejo@ub.edu; bernard.prevosto@irstea.fr
RI Vilagrosa, Alberto/B-3150-2008; Vallejo, V./L-8688-2014
OI Vallejo, V. Ramon/0000-0002-6559-9451; Gavinet,
   Jordane/0000-0001-5512-2644; Granados Garcia, Maria
   Elena/0000-0003-1942-9854; Vilagrosa, Alberto/0000-0002-1432-1214
FU FUME (FP7-Environment) [GA. 243888]; Region Provence-Alpes-Cote-d'Azur;
   Ministry of Ecology (MEDDE-DEB); SURVIVE [CGL-2011-30531-CO2-02];
   Consolider-GRACCIE [CTM2014-59111-REDC]; Generalitat Valenciana
FX This work was supported by the project FUME (FP7-Environment, GA.
   243888). Irstea also received funds from the Region
   Provence-Alpes-Cote-d'Azur and the Ministry of Ecology (MEDDE-DEB). CEAM
   was also supported by the projects SURVIVE (CGL-2011-30531-CO2-02),
   Consolider-GRACCIE (CTM2014-59111-REDC) and receive support from the
   Generalitat Valenciana.
CR [Anonymous], CLIMATE CHANGE 201 B
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NR 52
TC 34
Z9 38
U1 0
U2 44
PU SPRINGER FRANCE
PI PARIS
PA 22 RUE DE PALESTRO, PARIS, 75002, FRANCE
SN 1286-4560
EI 1297-966X
J9 ANN FOREST SCI
JI Ann. For. Sci.
PD DEC
PY 2015
VL 72
IS 8
BP 999
EP 1008
DI 10.1007/s13595-015-0495-4
PG 10
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA CX6IV
UT WOS:000365805300002
OA Green Published, Green Submitted, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Noor-Ul-Ane, M
   Arif, MJ
   Gogi, MD
   Khan, MA
AF Noor-ul-Ane, Muhammad
   Arif, Muhammad Jalal
   Gogi, Muhammad Dildar
   Khan, Muhammad Aslam
TI Evaluation of Different Integrated Pest Management Modules to Control
   Helicoverpa for Adaptation to Climate Change
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE AND BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Helicovepa armigera; Chrysoperla carnea; Habrobracon
   hebetor; IPM
ID ARMIGERA LEPIDOPTERA; DROUGHT STRESS; BEET ARMYWORM; RESISTANCE;
   NOCTUIDAE; INSECTICIDES; OVIPOSITION; HYMENOPTERA; COLEOPTERA; WEEVIL
AB The study was designed to investigate the impact of water stress on varietal response to cotton cultivars, Helicoverpa armigera and its associated entomophagous insects [Chrysoperla carnea (Stephens) and Habrobracon hebetor (Say)] as well as the feasibility of different Integrated Pest Management (IPM) modules for management of H. armigera. For this purpose, five drought resistant cotton genotypes i.e., FH-941, FH-187, FH-4243, FH-1000 and FH-207 were sown under irrigated and drought conditions. Larval population of H. armigera was low on water stressed plants (0.32 larvae/plant) as compared to irrigated plants (0.45 larvae/plant). In contrast, H. armigea caused more damage to stressed plants (16.90%) than irrigated plants (14.58%). FH-4243 was evaluated as resistant genotypes on the basis of less percent damage by H. armigera for both irrigated and drought conditions with value of 13.24 and 09.59%, respectively. Population of C. carnea was statistically similar under both for irrigated (0.20 larvae/plant) and drought conditions (0.19 larvae/plant). Unlikely, low parasitism of H. armigera by H. hebetor was observed under drought (14.64%) than irrigated condition (20.79%). Treatment involving integration of Neemosal, C. carnea and H. hebetor demonstrated 0.09 larvae/plant and provided maximum control of H. armigera; whereas alone application of Neemosal proved least effective against H. armigera (0.32 larvae/plant). On the basis of cost benefit ratio (CBR), module-15 involving integrated implementation of Spinosad, Neemosal, C. carnea and H. hebetor explained highest yield (1639.52 kg/ha) and CBR (1: 6.15) and proved economical and effective IPM module. In conclusion, water stress condition had positive impact on H. armigera feeding-damage (bi-trophic interaction) but had negative impact on parasitism. Integration of bio-control agents, botanicals and reduced-risk insecticides would be more cost-effective than their alone or two-level integration. (C) 2015 Friends Science Publishers
C1 [Noor-ul-Ane, Muhammad; Arif, Muhammad Jalal; Gogi, Muhammad Dildar] Univ Agr Faisalabad, Dept Entomol, Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
   [Khan, Muhammad Aslam] Univ Agr Faisalabad, Dept Plant Pathol, Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
C3 University of Agriculture Faisalabad; University of Agriculture
   Faisalabad
RP Noor-Ul-Ane, M (corresponding author), Univ Agr Faisalabad, Dept Entomol, Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan.
EM mnoor493@hotmail.com
RI Adnan, Muhammad/AFB-8795-2022; Gogi, Muhammad/AAE-4596-2019; Khan, M.
   Aslam/I-1813-2016
OI Khan, Muhammad Aslam/0000-0002-8901-4323; Khan, M.
   Aslam/0000-0002-0482-2111
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NR 66
TC 3
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 23
PU FRIENDS SCIENCE PUBL
PI FAISALABAD
PA 399-B, PEOPLES COLONY NO 1, FAISALABAD, 38090, PAKISTAN
SN 1560-8530
EI 1814-9596
J9 INT J AGRIC BIOL
JI Int. J. Agric. Biol.
PY 2015
VL 17
IS 3
BP 483
EP 490
DI 10.17957/IJAB/17.3.14.236
PG 8
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA CH8OR
UT WOS:000354296200009
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Meyer, E
   Aglyamova, GV
   Wang, S
   Buchanan-Carter, J
   Abrego, D
   Colbourne, JK
   Willis, BL
   Matz, MV
AF Meyer, Eli
   Aglyamova, Galina V.
   Wang, Shi
   Buchanan-Carter, Jade
   Abrego, David
   Colbourne, John K.
   Willis, Bette L.
   Matz, Mikhail V.
TI Sequencing and <i>de novo</i> analysis of a coral larval transcriptome
   using 454 GSFlx
SO BMC GENOMICS
LA English
DT Article
ID GENE-EXPRESSION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SNP DISCOVERY; REEF; GENOME;
   AMPLIFICATION; RESILIENCE
AB Background: New methods are needed for genomic-scale analysis of emerging model organisms that exemplify important biological questions but lack fully sequenced genomes. For example, there is an urgent need to understand the potential for corals to adapt to climate change, but few molecular resources are available for studying these processes in reef-building corals. To facilitate genomics studies in corals and other non-model systems, we describe methods for transcriptome sequencing using 454, as well as strategies for assembling a useful catalog of genes from the output. We have applied these methods to sequence the transcriptome of planulae larvae from the coral Acropora millepora.
   Results: More than 600,000 reads produced in a single 454 sequencing run were assembled into similar to 40,000 contigs with five-fold average sequencing coverage. Based on sequence similarity with known proteins, these analyses identified similar to 11,000 different genes expressed in a range of conditions including thermal stress and settlement induction. Assembled sequences were annotated with gene names, conserved domains, and Gene Ontology terms. Targeted searches using these annotations identified the majority of genes associated with essential metabolic pathways and conserved signaling pathways, as well as novel candidate genes for stress-related processes. Comparisons with the genome of the anemone Nematostella vectensis revealed similar to 8,500 pairs of orthologs and similar to 100 candidate coral-specific genes. More than 30,000 SNPs were detected in the coral sequences, and a subset of these validated by re-sequencing.
   Conclusion: The methods described here for deep sequencing of the transcriptome should be widely applicable to generate catalogs of genes and genetic markers in emerging model organisms. Our data provide the most comprehensive sequence resource currently available for reef-building corals, and include an extensive collection of potential genetic markers for association and population connectivity studies. The characterization of the larval transcriptome for this widely-studied coral will enable research into the biological processes underlying stress responses in corals and evolutionary adaptation to global climate change.
C1 [Meyer, Eli; Aglyamova, Galina V.; Wang, Shi; Matz, Mikhail V.] Univ Texas Austin, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
   [Buchanan-Carter, Jade; Colbourne, John K.] Indiana Univ, Ctr Genom & Bioinformat, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA.
   [Abrego, David; Willis, Bette L.] James Cook Univ, ARC Ctr Excellence Coral Reef Studies, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Abrego, David; Willis, Bette L.] James Cook Univ, Sch Marine & Trop Biol, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin; Indiana
   University System; Indiana University Bloomington; James Cook
   University; ARC Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies; James Cook
   University
RP Meyer, E (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, 1 Univ Stn C0930, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
EM EliMeyer@mail.utexas.edu; aglyamova@mail.utexas.edu;
   swang@mail.utexas.edu; jabuchan@indiana.edu; david.abrego@jcu.edu.au;
   jcolbour@cgb.indiana.edu; bette.willis@jcu.edu.au; matz@mail.utexas.edu
RI Abrego, David/AAT-8120-2020; Colbourne, John/L-7748-2014; Matz,
   Mikhail/K-4392-2017
OI Colbourne, John/0000-0002-6966-2972; Abrego, David/0000-0003-3311-2730;
   Aglyamova, Galina/0000-0001-6105-6399; Carter, Jade/0000-0003-2792-1662;
   Matz, Mikhail/0000-0001-5453-9819
CR [Anonymous], NCBI CONS DOM DAT
   [Anonymous], GENE ONTOLOGY
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   SYMBIOSYS
   JGI NEMATOSTELLA VEC
NR 52
TC 390
Z9 451
U1 1
U2 75
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1471-2164
J9 BMC GENOMICS
JI BMC Genomics
PD MAY 12
PY 2009
VL 10
AR 219
DI 10.1186/1471-2164-10-219
PG 18
WC Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology; Genetics & Heredity
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology; Genetics & Heredity
GA 456PZ
UT WOS:000266860600002
PM 19435504
OA Green Published, gold, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sasaki, T
   Berdugo, M
   Kinugasa, T
   Batdelger, G
   Baasandai, E
   Eisenhauer, N
AF Sasaki, Takehiro
   Berdugo, Miguel
   Kinugasa, Toshihiko
   Batdelger, Gantsetseg
   Baasandai, Erdenetsetseg
   Eisenhauer, Nico
TI Aridity-dependent shifts in biodiversity-stability relationships but not
   in underlying mechanisms
SO GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE aridification; compensatory dynamics; context dependency; dominant
   species; ecosystem functioning; functional group synchrony; species
   stability; species synchrony
ID ECOSYSTEM STABILITY; RESPONSE DIVERSITY; DIFFERENTIAL RESPONSES;
   FUNCTIONAL REDUNDANCY; GRAZING GRADIENT; PLANT DIVERSITY;
   INNER-MONGOLIA; PRODUCTIVITY; GRASSLAND; VEGETATION
AB Climate change will affect the way biodiversity influences the stability of plant communities. Although biodiversity, associated species asynchrony, and species stability could enhance community stability, the understanding of potential nonlinear shifts in the biodiversity-stability relationship across a wide range of aridity (measured as the aridity index, the precipitation/potential evapotranspiration ratio) gradients and the underlying mechanisms remain limited. Using an 8-year dataset from 687 sites in Mongolia, which included 5496 records of vegetation and productivity, we found that the temporal stability of plant communities decreased more rapidly in more arid areas than in less arid areas. The result suggests that future aridification across terrestrial ecosystems may adversely affect community stability. Additionally, we identified nonlinear shifts in the effects of species richness and species synchrony on temporal community stability along the aridity gradient. Species synchrony was a primary driver of community stability, which was consistently negatively affected by species richness while being positively affected by the synchrony between C3 and C4 species across the aridity gradient. These results highlight the crucial role of C4 species in stabilizing communities through differential responses to interannual climate variations between C3 and C4 species. Notably, species richness and the synchrony between C3 and C4 species independently regulated species synchrony, ultimately affecting community stability. We propose that maintaining plant communities with a high diversity of C3 and C4 species will be key to enhancing community stability across Mongolian grasslands. Moreover, species synchrony, species stability, species richness and the synchrony between C3 and C4 species across the aridity gradient consistently mediated the impacts of aridity on community stability. Hence, strategies aimed at promoting the maintenance of biological diversity and composition will help ecosystems adapt to climate change or mitigate its adverse effects on ecosystem stability.
   Climate change will affect the way biodiversity influences the stability of plant communities. Using an 8-year dataset from 687 sites in Mongolia, we found that the temporal community stability decreased more rapidly in more arid areas than in less arid areas. Species synchrony was a primary driver of community stability, which was consistently negatively affected by species richness while being positively affected by the synchrony between C3 and C4 species across the aridity gradient. Maintaining plant communities with a high diversity of C3 and C4 species will be key to enhancing community stability across Mongolian grasslands in a changing climate.image
C1 [Sasaki, Takehiro] Yokohama Natl Univ, Grad Sch Environm & Informat Sci, Yokohama, Japan.
   [Sasaki, Takehiro; Eisenhauer, Nico] German Ctr Integrat Biodivers Res iDiv, Leipzig, Germany.
   [Sasaki, Takehiro; Eisenhauer, Nico] Univ Leipzig, Inst Biol, Leipzig, Germany.
   [Sasaki, Takehiro; Eisenhauer, Nico] Yokohama Natl Univ, Inst Multidisciplinary Sci, Yokohama, Japan.
   [Berdugo, Miguel] Univ Complutense Madrid, Dept Biodivers Ecol & Evolut, Madrid, Spain.
   [Berdugo, Miguel] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Integrat Biol, Dept Environm Syst Sci, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Kinugasa, Toshihiko] Tottori Univ, Fac Agr, Tottori, Japan.
   [Batdelger, Gantsetseg; Baasandai, Erdenetsetseg] Informat & Res Inst Meteorol Hydrol & Environm IRI, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia.
C3 Yokohama National University; Leipzig University; Yokohama National
   University; Complutense University of Madrid; Swiss Federal Institutes
   of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; Tottori University
RP Sasaki, T (corresponding author), Yokohama Natl Univ, Grad Sch Environm & Informat Sci, Yokohama, Japan.
EM sasaki-takehiro-kw@ynu.ac.jp
RI Eisenhauer, Nico/I-5932-2012
OI Eisenhauer, Nico/0000-0002-0371-6720
FU Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
FX We thank the staff at the Information and Research Institute of
   Meteorology, Hydrology and Environment (IRIMHE) for their assistance in
   collecting field data from the whole of Mongolia. We would also like to
   thank the reviewers for their constructive comments and insightful
   suggestions, which have improved the manuscript immensely.
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NR 75
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 50
U2 63
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1354-1013
EI 1365-2486
J9 GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
JI Glob. Change Biol.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 30
IS 6
AR e17365
DI 10.1111/gcb.17365
PG 13
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TU8F6
UT WOS:001243858200001
PM 38864217
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Basiita, RK
   Zenger, KR
   Mwanja, MT
   Jerry, DR
AF Basiita, Rose K.
   Zenger, Kyall R.
   Mwanja, Matthew T.
   Jerry, Dean R.
TI Gene flow and genetic structure in Nile perch, <i>Lates niloticus</i>,
   from African freshwater rivers and lakes
SO PLOS ONE
LA English
DT Article
ID SPATIAL AUTOCORRELATION ANALYSIS; KYOGA EAST-AFRICA;
   OREOCHROMIS-NILOTICUS; POPULATION-STRUCTURE; CICHLID FISHES; PLEISTOCENE
   DESICCATION; RE-IMPLEMENTATION; DNA ANALYSES; KAINJI LAKE; VICTORIA
AB Background
   Geological evolution of the African continent has been subject to complex processes including uplift, volcanism, desert formation and tectonic rifting. This complex geology has created substantial biogeographical barriers, and coupled with anthropogenic introductions of freshwater fishes, has influenced the genetic diversity, connectivity and sub-structuring of the teleost fauna. Nile perch, Lates niloticus, is an iconic fish in Africa and is of high commercial importance, both in the species' native range and where it has been translocated. However, the species is in decline and there is a need to understand its population genetic structure to facilitate sustainable management of the fishery and aquaculture development.
   Methodology
   Nile perch tissue samples were acquired from two West and four East (Lakes; Albert, Kyoga, Victoria and Turkana) African locations. Nineteen polymorphic microsatellite loci were used to study the genetic variation among populations across regions (West and East Africa), as well as between native and introduced environments within East Africa.
   Principal findings and their significance
   Results revealed strong and significant genetic structuring among populations across the sampled distribution (divergence across regions, F-CT = 0.26, P = 0.000). STRUCTURE analysis at a broad scale revealed K = 2 clusters, the West African individuals were assigned to one cluster, while all individuals from the East African region, regardless of whether native or introduced, were assigned to another cluster. The distinct genetic clusters identified in the current study between the West and East African Nile perch, appear to have been maintained by presence of biogeographic barriers and restricted gene flow between the two regions. Therefore, any translocations of Nile perch should be carefully considered across the regions of West and East Africa. Further analysis at a regional scale revealed further structuring of up to K = 3 genetic clusters in East African Nile perch. Significantly (P < 0.05) lower genetic diversity based on analysis of allelic richness (A(R)) was obtained for the two translocated populations of Lake Kyoga (A(R) = 3.61) and Lake Victoria (A(R) = 3.52), compared to Nile perch populations from their putative origins of Lakes Albert (A(R) = 4.12) and Turkana (A(R) = 4.43). The lower genetic diversity in the translocated populations may be an indication of previous bottlenecks and may also indicate a difficulty for these populations to persist and adapt to climatic changes and anthropogenic pressures that are currently present in the East African region.
C1 [Basiita, Rose K.; Zenger, Kyall R.; Jerry, Dean R.] James Cook Univ, Coll Sci & Engn, Ctr Sustainable Trop Fisheries & Aquaculture, Townsville, Qld, Australia.
   [Basiita, Rose K.; Mwanja, Matthew T.] Natl Agr Res Org, Natl Fisheries Resources Res Inst, Aquaculture Res & Dev Ctr Kajjansi, Kampala, Uganda.
   [Basiita, Rose K.] WorldFish Zambia Off, Ridgeway Lusaka, Zambia.
C3 James Cook University; CGIAR; Worldfish
RP Basiita, RK (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, Coll Sci & Engn, Ctr Sustainable Trop Fisheries & Aquaculture, Townsville, Qld, Australia.; Basiita, RK (corresponding author), Natl Agr Res Org, Natl Fisheries Resources Res Inst, Aquaculture Res & Dev Ctr Kajjansi, Kampala, Uganda.; Basiita, RK (corresponding author), WorldFish Zambia Off, Ridgeway Lusaka, Zambia.
EM Basiitarose@gmail.com
RI Jerry, Dean/B-3053-2012; Basiita, Rose Komugisha/C-6112-2016; Zenger,
   Kyall/ABD-2101-2020
OI Basiita, Rose Komugisha/0000-0002-7257-0286; Jerry,
   Dean/0000-0003-3735-1798; Zenger, Kyall/0000-0001-6817-8786
FU James Cook University; AusAID PhD scholarship; Uganda Government
FX We acknowledge funding contribution from James Cook University through
   the competitive research grant scheme for post graduates awarded to RKB.
   We also recognize the AusAID PhD scholarship awarded to RKB. All the
   Samples used in the study from East African sites were availed through
   Funding by the Uganda Government. DRJ secured all resources required for
   lab analysis, manuscript preparation and publication costs. We declare
   the funders had no role in the study design, data analysis, decision to
   publish and preparation of the manuscript.
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NR 91
TC 9
Z9 10
U1 0
U2 6
PU PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA 1160 BATTERY STREET, STE 100, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111 USA
SN 1932-6203
J9 PLOS ONE
JI PLoS One
PD JUL 11
PY 2018
VL 13
IS 7
AR e0200001
DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0200001
PG 21
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA GM7QQ
UT WOS:000438388800039
PM 29995906
OA Green Accepted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Niiro, S
AF Niiro, Samuel
TI An Injury to the Inheritance: Locating an Affirmative Obligation to
   Climate Adaptation in the Law of Waste
SO COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF LAW AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS
LA English
DT Article
ID DUTY
AB As global temperatures continue to rise, most climate policy conversations have focused on mitigation measures, aimed at reducing the proliferation of greenhouse gases and curbing the rise in temperatures. Discussions, especially in legal literature, about climate adaptation measures-those intended to, for example, prepare for rising sea levels or increasing incidence of extreme weather events-have generally focused on the powers and responsibilities of government actors. Private citizens too, however, may also have a duty to prepare for climate change.
   The law of waste is a longstanding doctrine under which holders of a current possessory interest in real property, such as tenants or mortgagors, bear certain responsibilities towards holders of concurrent or future interests, such as lessors or mortgagees. This Note argues that a subset of the law of waste, called permissive waste, may be read to impose a duty to affirmatively pursue climate adaptation measures on tenants and other similarly-situated individuals. Part II provides background information on current efforts to find a legal basis for a duty to pursue climate adaptation. Part III examines the history of the law of waste, with particular attention to the concept of permissive waste. Parts IV and V outline how the law of waste could be applied to the problem of climate adaptation, exploring the necessary conditions for such a claim to be made as well as the uses and limitations of using the law of waste in this fashion.
C1 [Niiro, Samuel] Columbia Law Sch, New York, NY 10027 USA.
C3 Columbia University
RP Niiro, S (corresponding author), Columbia Law Sch, New York, NY 10027 USA.
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TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU COLUMBIA JOURNAL TRANSNATIONAL LAW ASSOC
PI NEW YORK
PA COLUMBIA UNIV, SCHOOL LAW, 435 W 116TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10027 USA
SN 0010-1923
J9 COLUMBIA J LAW SOC P
JI Columbia J. Law Soc. Probl.
PY 2019
VL 52
IS 4
PG 35
WC Law; Social Issues
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law; Social Issues
GA II9EK
UT WOS:000475498500004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Zawahri, NA
AF Zawahri, Neda A.
BE Cahan, JA
TI ADAPTING TO CLIMATIC VARIABILITY ALONG INTERNATIONAL RIVER BASINS IN THE
   MIDDLE EAST
SO WATER SECURITY IN THE MIDDLE EAST: ESSAYS IN SCIENTIFIC AND SOCIAL
   COOPERATION
SE Anthem Water Diplomacy Series
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Symposium on Water in the Middle East
CY MAY, 2014
CL Univ Nebraska, Robert B Daugherty Water Food Inst, Lincoln, NE
SP Univ Nebraska Norman, Harris Ctr Judaic Studies
HO Univ Nebraska, Robert B Daugherty Water Food Inst
ID WATER-RESOURCES; CHANGE IMPACTS; CONFLICT; COOPERATION; ADAPTATION;
   LESSONS; DESIGN; TRENDS
C1 [Zawahri, Neda A.] Cleveland State Univ, Polit Sci, Cleveland, OH 44115 USA.
C3 University System of Ohio; Cleveland State University
RP Zawahri, NA (corresponding author), Cleveland State Univ, Polit Sci, Cleveland, OH 44115 USA.
FU Cleveland State University
FX The Faculty Scholarship Initiative Award from Cleveland State University
   funded field research in Jordan, Palestine and Israel during April and
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NR 55
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 1
PU ANTHEM PRESS
PI LONDON
PA 75-76 BLACKFRIARS RD, LONDON, SE1 8HA, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-78308-567-5; 978-1-78308-566-8
J9 ANTHEM WATER DIPL SE
PY 2017
BP 145
EP 166
PG 22
WC Area Studies; Environmental Studies; International Relations
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Area Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; International Relations
GA BK1YH
UT WOS:000432421700007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wutzler, B
   Hudson, P
   Thieken, AH
AF Wutzler, Bianca
   Hudson, Paul
   Thieken, Annegret H.
TI Adaptation strategies of flood-damaged businesses in Germany
SO FRONTIERS IN WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE risk management; climate change adaptation; floods; disaster risk
   reduction; Germany; precaution; emergency management
ID PRECAUTIONARY MEASURES; PRIVATE HOUSEHOLDS; JUNE 2013; RISK; MITIGATION;
   MOTIVATION; RESIDENTS; IMPACTS; PREPAREDNESS; PERCEPTIONS
AB Flood risk management in Germany follows an integrative approach in which both private households and businesses can make an important contribution to reducing flood damage by implementing property-level adaptation measures. While the flood adaptation behavior of private households has already been widely researched, comparatively less attention has been paid to the adaptation strategies of businesses. However, their ability to cope with flood risk plays an important role in the social and economic development of a flood-prone region. Therefore, using quantitative survey data, this study aims to identify different strategies and adaptation drivers of 557 businesses damaged by a riverine flood in 2013 and 104 businesses damaged by pluvial or flash floods between 2014 and 2017. Our results indicate that a low perceived self-efficacy may be an important factor that can reduce the motivation of businesses to adapt to flood risk. Furthermore, property-owners tended to act more proactively than tenants. In addition, high experience with previous flood events and low perceived response costs could strengthen proactive adaptation behavior. These findings should be considered in business-tailored risk communication.
C1 [Wutzler, Bianca; Hudson, Paul; Thieken, Annegret H.] Univ Potsdam, Inst Environm Sci & Geog, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Hudson, Paul] Univ York, Dept Environm & Geog, York, England.
C3 University of Potsdam; University of York - UK
RP Wutzler, B (corresponding author), Univ Potsdam, Inst Environm Sci & Geog, Potsdam, Germany.
EM bwutzler@uni-potsdam.de
RI Hudson, Paul/GPS-9348-2022; Hudson, Paul/L-1491-2013; Thieken,
   Annegret/B-1946-2017
OI Hudson, Paul/0000-0001-7877-7854; Thieken, Annegret/0000-0001-7068-2615
FU Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [GRK 2043/2]; BMBF-project
   Hochwasser 2013 [13N13017]; DFG Research Training Group NatRiskChange
   [GRK 2043/1]
FX The presented work was developed within the framework of the Research
   Training Group Natural Hazards and Risks in a Changing World
   (NatRiskChange) funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG; GRK
   2043/2). The two data sets were collected within the BMBF-project
   Hochwasser 2013 (FKZ: 13N13017) and the DFG Research Training Group
   NatRiskChange (GRK 2043/1), respectively.
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NR 53
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 4
U2 20
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9375
J9 FRONT WATER
JI Front. Water
PD SEP 26
PY 2022
VL 4
AR 932061
DI 10.3389/frwa.2022.932061
PG 13
WC Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Water Resources
GA 5Q7QV
UT WOS:000874022200001
OA Green Published, Green Accepted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Owens, K
   Carmody, E
   Grafton, Q
   O'Donnell, E
   Wheeler, S
   Godden, L
   Allen, R
   Lyster, R
   Steduto, P
   Jiang, Q
   Kingsford, R
   Quiggin, J
AF Owens, Katherine
   Carmody, Emma
   Grafton, Quentin
   O'Donnell, Erin
   Wheeler, Sarah
   Godden, Lee
   Allen, Richard
   Lyster, Rosemary
   Steduto, Pasquale
   Jiang, Qiang
   Kingsford, Richard
   Quiggin, John
TI Delivering global water security: Embedding water justice as a response
   to increased irrigation efficiency
SO WILEY INTERDISCIPLINARY REVIEWS-WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; governance; Indigenous Peoples; irrigation
   efficiency; water justice
ID POLICY; BASIN; CONSERVATION; MANAGEMENT
AB Increasingly, irrigation infrastructure upgrades have been regarded in global policy as a solution for both water scarcity and low agricultural productivity. However, these technical "fixes" may ultimately prove to be dangerous shortcuts that do little to address the concerns of irrigators, Indigenous People, environmental groups, and local communities about water scarcity, access, security, and sustainability. In the absence of transparent and rigorous governance safeguards, irrigation efficiency upgrades can result in higher water consumption, demand, and ultimately, increased water scarcity. Upgraded irrigation systems also tend to capture return flows and redistribute them to "high value" consumptive water uses, potentially displacing other users and uses, including Indigenous Peoples. In this article, we critique current approaches to governing irrigation efficiency, using a water justice lens to identify four key insights and their implications for governance. We propose new governance pathways and options that take into consideration hydrological realities and the full range of water demands and needs.
   This article is categorized under:
   Human Water > Water Governance
   Water and Life > Conservation, Management, and Awareness
   Human Water > Water as Imagined and Represented
C1 [Owens, Katherine; Carmody, Emma; Lyster, Rosemary] Univ Sydney, Sch Law, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
   [Carmody, Emma] Restore Blue, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
   [Grafton, Quentin] Australian Natl Univ, Lennox Crossing, Crawford Sch, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
   [O'Donnell, Erin; Godden, Lee] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Law Sch, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Wheeler, Sarah] Univ Adelaide, Sch Econ & Publ Policy, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
   [Allen, Richard] Univ Idaho, Dept Soil & Water Syst, Kimberly, ID USA.
   [Steduto, Pasquale] Food & Agr Org, Reg Off Near East & North Africa, Cairo, Egypt.
   [Jiang, Qiang] Sichuan Univ, SCU Business Sch, Chengdu, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
   [Kingsford, Richard] Univ New South Wales, Sch Biol Earth & Environm Sci, Ctr Ecosyst Sci, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
   [Quiggin, John] Univ Queensland, Sch Econ, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
C3 University of Sydney; Australian National University; University of
   Melbourne; University of Adelaide; University of Idaho; Food &
   Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO); Sichuan
   University; University of New South Wales Sydney; University of
   Queensland
RP Owens, K (corresponding author), Univ Sydney, Sch Law, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
EM kate.owens@sydney.edu.au
RI Grafton, Quentin/AAS-2316-2021; Quiggin, John/C-1621-2013; Steduto,
   Pasquale/ADX-8892-2022; O'Donnell, Erin/AAA-2678-2019; Wheeler,
   Sarah/H-4000-2017; Grafton, Quentin/A-5277-2008
OI O'Donnell, Erin/0000-0002-2615-8012; Owens,
   Katherine/0000-0002-5697-3878; Wheeler, Sarah/0000-0002-6073-3172;
   Grafton, Quentin/0000-0002-0048-9083; Kingsford,
   Richard/0000-0001-6565-4134
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NR 59
TC 14
Z9 15
U1 2
U2 23
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 2049-1948
J9 WIRES WATER
JI Wiley Interdiscip. Rev.-Water
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 9
IS 6
AR e1608
DI 10.1002/wat2.1608
EA SEP 2022
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA 6A3TG
UT WOS:000852813200001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Anik, AR
   Rahman, S
   Sarker, JR
   Al Hasan, M
AF Anik, Asif Reza
   Rahman, Sanzidur
   Sarker, Jaba Rani
   Al Hasan, Mahmud
TI Farmers' adaptation strategies to combat climate change in drought prone
   areas in Bangladesh
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation strategies; Agriculture; Multivariate probit
   model; Bangladesh
ID EMPIRICAL-EVIDENCE; DETERMINANTS; DECISIONS; ADOPTION; IMPACTS; LEVEL;
   AGRICULTURE; VARIABILITY; VULNERABILITY; ENVIRONMENTS
AB Drought introduces a different set of risks and adaptation strategies as compared to flood, river erosion and other natural hazards. This paper attempts to investigate farmers' adaptation strategies to combat climate change in drought prone areas and identify their determinants based on a survey of 480 farmers from northwestern Bangladesh. Farmers commonly practicing six technology-based strategies and one labour/family-based strategy with 80% adapting two or more adaptation strategies. Although synergy exists between selected strategies, competition also exist between rice- and non-rice based strategies. The likelihood of undertaking climate change adaptation strategies are significantly and positively influenced by education, subsistence pressure, income from livestock and poultry, extension services, involvement in organizations and the use of ICT in farming. Adaptation probability inversely related with increasing women participation in agricultural labour force. Recommendations include strengthening extension services and promoting use of ICT in farming, incorporation of climatic information in education, easing and facilitating farmers' access to institutions and promotion of livestock rearing to combat climate change induced challenges on farming in drought prone areas.
C1 [Anik, Asif Reza; Sarker, Jaba Rani] Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agr Univ BSMRAU, Dept Agr Econ, Gazipur, Bangladesh.
   [Rahman, Sanzidur] Shandong Univ Finance & Econ, Fac Econ, Jinan 250001, Shandong, Peoples R China.
   [Sarker, Jaba Rani] Cent Queensland Univ, Sch Business & Law, Rockhampton, Qld, Australia.
   [Al Hasan, Mahmud] British Amer Tobacco, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Rahman, Sanzidur] Univ Plymouth, Plymouth Business Sch, Plymouth PL4 8AA, Devon, England.
C3 Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University (BSMRAU);
   Shandong University of Finance & Economics; Central Queensland
   University; University of Plymouth
RP Anik, AR (corresponding author), Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agr Univ BSMRAU, Dept Agr Econ, Gazipur, Bangladesh.
EM anikbd1979@gmail.com; srahman@plymouth.ac.uk;
   jrsarker.aec@bsmrau.edu.bd; mahmudbivor@gmail.com
RI Sarker, Jaba/KGL-2781-2024; Anik, Asif/Y-4630-2019; Rahman,
   Sanzidur/AAO-6993-2020
OI Rahman, Sanzidur/0000-0002-0391-6191; Anik, Asif
   Reza/0000-0002-0461-6094
FU Ministry of Science and Technology, Government of Bangladesh
FX This study was financially supported by Ministry of Science and
   Technology, Government of Bangladesh. The authors gratefully acknowledge
   contribution of Shaima Chowdhury Sharna in preparing the map and
   location of the study area (Fig. 4) . The authors also gratefully
   acknowledge critical comments made by the referees and associate editor,
   which has substantially improved the paper. All caveats remain with the
   authors.
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NR 98
TC 27
Z9 28
U1 2
U2 32
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 65
AR 102562
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102562
EA SEP 2021
PG 12
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA UY6YB
UT WOS:000701665800003
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Peker, E
AF Peker, Ender
TI An Urbanism Challenge: Provision of Thermal Comfort in Changing Climate
SO PLANLAMA-PLANNING
LA Turkish
DT Article
DE Climate change; climate responsive space production; urban design;
   thermal comfort
ID IMPACT; FIELD
AB Taking the challenges of provision of thermal comfort as a point of departure, this paper argues that climate responsive urban design has great potential to make cities more resilient to climate change. With a concern of climate responsivity, this research brings a critical perspective on the current urbanization trends in Turkish cities and underlines the inconsistence nature of ongoing urban developments with the foreseen climate change adaptation and mitigation policies. The research is constructed based on a comparative study between the traditional urban pattern that has been developed since the Artuqids era and the contemporary urban pattern that has been developed from the 60s in the province of Mardin. The comparative study focused on responsivity of the produced urban spaces both in terms of both the climatic conditions and the ways which local people uses the urban space. While doing that, the research explored the role of urban space on the provision of urban thermal comfort in everyday life. The research revealed that existing development trends in Mardin leave citizens vulnerable to the negative effects of increasing temperature values and potential heat waves in future.
C1 [Peker, Ender] Ingiliz Arastirma Enstitusu, Ankara, Turkey.
RP Peker, E (corresponding author), Ingiliz Arastirma Enstitusu, Ankara, Turkey.
EM pekerender@gmail.com
RI Peker, Ender/ABF-4142-2021
OI PEKER, ENDER/0000-0002-1371-5270
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NR 23
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 9
PU KARE PUBL
PI ISTANBUL
PA CONCORD ISTANBUL, DUMLUPINAR MAH, CIHAN SK NO 15, B BLOK 162 KADIKOY,
   ISTANBUL, TURKEY
SN 1300-7319
J9 PLANLAMA
JI Planlama
PY 2021
VL 31
IS 1
BP 108
EP 119
DI 10.14744/planlama.2020.92679
PG 12
WC Regional & Urban Planning
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Public Administration
GA QR6PG
UT WOS:000625337800009
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Peng, L
   Tan, J
   Deng, W
   Liu, Y
AF Peng, Li
   Tan, Jing
   Deng, Wei
   Liu, Ying
TI Farmers' participation in community-based disaster management: The role
   of trust, place attachment and self-efficacy
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Community-based disaster management; Geological disaster; Social trust;
   Place attachment; Self-efficacy
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK REDUCTION; PREPAREDNESS; PERCEPTION;
   GOVERNMENT; HAZARD; SATISFACTION; INTENTIONS; MEDIATION; BEHAVIOR
AB Community-based disaster management (CBDM) is an effective approach to addressing geological disasters, particularly for rural residents and communities in developing countries. It is acknowledged by scholars and practitioners that participation is key for a sustainable CBDM program. This study empirically examined whether social trust (including interpersonal trust and institutional trust) affects rural residents' participation in CBDM (PCBDM). Moreover, it explored the mediating effects of place attachment and the moderating effects of self efficacy and gender. The data were collected through a questionnaire survey (N = 516) in the geodisasterprone area of rural Chongqing, China. Partial least squares structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) was applied to test the proposed hypotheses. The findings indicate that interpersonal trust plays a crucial role in motivating PCBDM. Institutional trust can increase participation by increasing place attachment. Self-efficacy and female identity strengthens the linkage between interpersonal trust and PCBDM. The current study provides a new psychological perspective for understanding and promoting PCBDM in practice.
C1 [Peng, Li; Deng, Wei; Liu, Ying] Sichuan Normal Univ, Coll Geog & Resources, Chengdu 610101, Peoples R China.
   [Peng, Li] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Mt Hazards & Environm, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
   [Tan, Jing] Southwestern Univ Finance & Econ, China Western Econ Res Ctr, Chengdu 610074, Peoples R China.
C3 Sichuan Normal University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of
   Mountain Hazards & Environment, CAS; Southwestern University of Finance
   & Economics - China
RP Tan, J (corresponding author), Southwestern Univ Finance & Econ, China Western Econ Res Ctr, Chengdu 610074, Peoples R China.
EM pengli@imde.ac.cn; 118020106001@smail.swufe.edu.cn; dengwei@imde.ac.cn;
   liuying@imde.ac.cn
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41771194, 41930651]
FX This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (Grant No. 41771194; Grant No. 41930651).
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NR 95
TC 47
Z9 47
U1 17
U2 98
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 51
AR 101895
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2020.101895
PG 12
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA PG4PK
UT WOS:000599718700006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Masetti, R
   Prodi, A
   Liberatore, A
   Carfagnini, F
   Cappelletti, E
   Leardini, D
   Pession, A
   De Carolis, E
   Cricca, M
AF Masetti, Riccardo
   Prodi, Antonio
   Liberatore, Andrea
   Carfagnini, Filomena
   Cappelletti, Eleonora
   Leardini, Davide
   Pession, Andrea
   De Carolis, Elena
   Cricca, Monica
TI Occurrence of <i>Albifimbria verrucaria</i> in the Blood of a Female
   Child With Neuroblastoma
SO FRONTIERS IN MEDICINE
LA English
DT Article
DE blood; neuroblastoma; immunodeficiency; invasive infection; filamentous
   fungus; Albifimbria verrucaria; climatic change adaption
ID ASPERGILLUS
AB We report for the first time the occurrence of a filamentous fungus, Albifimbria verrucaria, in the blood of a pediatric neuroblastoma patient. The Albifimbria genus comprises common soil-inhabiting and saprophytic fungi and has been isolated as a plant pathogen in Northern and Southern Italy. As a human pathogen, A. verrucaria has been implicated in keratitis and can produce trichothecene toxins, which are weakly cytotoxic for mammalian cell lines. A. verrucaria was isolated from blood during the follow-up of a previous coagulase-negative Staphylococcus catheter-related infection. Lung nodules, compatible with fungal infection, had been observed on a CT scan 6 months earlier; they still persist. Possible routes of transmission were considered to be airborne, catheter related, or transfusion dependent, as the patient had undergone platelet and red blood cell transfusions during rescue chemotherapy. No filamentous fungi were isolated from sputum or CVCs. In conclusion, we describe an unprecedented fungemia caused by A. verrucaria and show how an unexpected pathogen may be acquired from the environment by patients at high risk due to immunosuppression. The route of transmission remains unknown.
C1 [Masetti, Riccardo; Leardini, Davide; Pession, Andrea] Univ Bologna, Dept Pediat, Lalla Seragnoli Hematol Oncol Unit, Bologna, Italy.
   [Prodi, Antonio; Cappelletti, Eleonora] Univ Bologna, Dept Agr & Food Sci, Bologna, Italy.
   [Liberatore, Andrea; Cricca, Monica] Univ Bologna, Dept Expt Diagnost & Specialty Med, Bologna, Italy.
   [Carfagnini, Filomena] St Orsola Malpighi Hosp, Pediat Radiol, Bologna, Italy.
   [De Carolis, Elena] Univ Cattolica Sacro Cuore, Polyclin Univ Fdn Agostino Gemelli, Inst MicroBiol, IRCCS, Rome, Italy.
C3 University of Bologna; University of Bologna; University of Bologna;
   IRCCS Azienda Ospedaliero-Universitaria di Bologna; Catholic University
   of the Sacred Heart; IRCCS Policlinico Gemelli
RP Cricca, M (corresponding author), Univ Bologna, Dept Expt Diagnost & Specialty Med, Bologna, Italy.
EM monica.cricca3@unibo.it
RI Masetti, Riccardo/G-6837-2011; Leardini, Davide/AAZ-7944-2020;
   De+Carolis, Elena/ABD-9703-2020; Pession, Andrea/O-3200-2013
OI Cappelletti, Eleonora/0000-0003-3931-9249; Cricca,
   Monica/0000-0002-2815-3119; Leardini, Davide/0000-0002-4673-5876; de
   carolis, elena/0000-0003-4757-7256
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NR 17
TC 3
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 4
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-858X
J9 FRONT MED-LAUSANNE
JI Front. Med.
PD FEB 14
PY 2020
VL 7
AR 13
DI 10.3389/fmed.2020.00013
PG 6
WC Medicine, General & Internal
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC General & Internal Medicine
GA KR2OZ
UT WOS:000517460900001
PM 32118003
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sibanda, S
   Grab, SW
   Ahmed, F
AF Sibanda, S.
   Grab, S. W.
   Ahmed, F.
TI An evaluation of the CORDEX regional climate models in simulating future
   rainfall and extreme events over Mzingwane catchment, Zimbabwe
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID TEMPERATURE TRENDS; SOUTH-AFRICA; PRECIPITATION; PROJECTIONS; WETLANDS;
   IMPACTS
AB The study evaluated CORDEX RCMs' ability to project future rainfall and extreme events in the Mzingwane catchment using an ensemble average of three RCMs (RCA4, REMO2009 and CRCM5). Model validation employed the statistical mean and Pearson correlation, while trends in projected rainfall and number of rainy days were computed using the Mann-Kendall trend test and the magnitudes of trends were determined by Sen's slope estimator. Temporal and spatial distribution of future extreme dryness and wetness was established by using the Standard Precipitation Index (SPI). The results show that RCMs adequately represented annual and inter-annual rainfall variability and the ensemble average outperformed individual models. Trend results for the projected rainfall suggest a significant decreasing trend in future rainfall (2016-2100) for all stations at p < 0.05. In addition, a general decreasing trend in the number of rainy days is projected for future climate, although the significance and magnitude varied with station location. Model results suggest an increased occurrence of future extreme events, particularly towards the end of the century. The findings are important for developing proactive sustainable strategies for future climate change adaption and mitigation.
C1 [Sibanda, S.; Grab, S. W.; Ahmed, F.] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Witwatersrand
RP Sibanda, S (corresponding author), Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM sethilana@gmail.com
RI Sibanda, Sethi/GQZ-5896-2022
OI Ahmed, Fethi/0000-0001-5947-9835; Sibanda, Sethi/0000-0003-0510-6288
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NR 37
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 11
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI WIEN
PA SACHSENPLATZ 4-6, PO BOX 89, A-1201 WIEN, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 140
IS 1-2
BP 91
EP 100
DI 10.1007/s00704-019-03074-6
EA DEC 2019
PG 10
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA KW9LW
UT WOS:000504158100003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Teufel, B
   Sushama, L
AF Teufel, B.
   Sushama, L.
TI Abrupt changes across the Arctic permafrost region endanger northern
   development
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE
AB Extensive degradation of near-surface permafrost is projected during the twenty-first century(1), which will have detrimental effects on northern communities, ecosystems and engineering systems. This degradation is predicted to have consequences for many processes, which previous modelling studies have suggested would occur gradually. Here we project that soil moisture will decrease abruptly (within a few months) in response to permafrost degradation over large areas of the present-day permafrost region, based on analysis of transient climate change simulations performed using a state-of-the-art regional climate model. This regime shift is reflected in abrupt increases in summer near-surface temperature and convective precipitation, and decreases in relative humidity and surface runoff. Of particular relevance to northern systems are changes to the bearing capacity of the soil due to increased drainage, increases in the potential for intense rainfall events and increases in lightning frequency. Combined with increases in forest fuel combustibility, these are projected to abruptly and substantially increase the severity of wildfires, which constitute one of the greatest risks to northern ecosystems, communities and infrastructures. The fact that these changes are projected to occur abruptly further increases the challenges associated with climate change adaptation and potential retrofitting measures.
C1 [Teufel, B.; Sushama, L.] McGill Univ, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
C3 McGill University
RP Teufel, B (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
EM bernardo.teufel@mail.mcgill.ca
OI Teufel, Bernardo/0000-0003-1331-2030
FU Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
   [RGPIN-2019-05238]; Trottier Institute for Sustainability in Engineering
   and Design; McGill Sustainability Systems Initiative
FX This research was funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering
   Research Council of Canada (grant no. RGPIN-2019-05238), the Trottier
   Institute for Sustainability in Engineering and Design and the McGill
   Sustainability Systems Initiative. The GEM simulations in this study
   were performed on supercomputers managed by Calcul Quebec and Compute
   Canada.
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NR 32
TC 90
Z9 102
U1 10
U2 76
PU NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA MACMILLAN BUILDING, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD NOV
PY 2019
VL 9
IS 11
BP 858
EP +
DI 10.1038/s41558-019-0614-6
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA JI8TB
UT WOS:000493735100019
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wilson, MT
AF Wilson, Michael T.
TI Assessing voluntary resilience standards and impacts of flood risk
   information
SO BUILDING RESEARCH AND INFORMATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Floods; resilience; climate change; urban planning and design
ID CLIMATE; ADAPTATION
AB Voluntary resilience standards are an emerging tool for cities to incentivize developers to incorporate climate change adaptation strategies. Urban planners and researchers, however, are still assessing their relative impacts on the design of recent large-scale development projects. This paper answers the question of whether, and at what scale, anticipated changes to mapped flood risk are associated with mitigation actions to accommodate climate change. A case study of the Climate Change Preparedness and Resiliency Checklist in Boston, Massachusetts presents a database of 171 unique survey responses from 104 proposed projects. Comparing developments with documentation to an internal subset of 54 projects in the Boston Planning and Development Agency's projected Sea Level Rise - Flood Hazard Area (SLR-FHA), this paper finds projects impacted by updated Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) Flood Insurance Rate Maps (FIRMs) are associated with different building uses, higher sea level rise assumptions and greater abilities to endure inundation. There are also neighbourhood-level differences in climate expertise and the projects' ability to withstand utility disruption. Both of these observed impacts may have important implications for the formulation and application of voluntary resilience standards in other coastal cities.
C1 [Wilson, Michael T.] RAND Corp, Boston, MA 02116 USA.
C3 RAND Corporation
RP Wilson, MT (corresponding author), RAND Corp, Boston, MA 02116 USA.
EM miwilson@rand.org
OI Wilson, Mike/0000-0002-4907-1550
FU Boston Area Research Initiative Seed Grant; Massachusetts Institute of
   Technology's Department of Urban Studies and Planning (DUSP) Emerson
   Travel Grant; Lynne Sagalyn and Gary Hack DUSP Fund
FX This work was conducted as a Doctoral Candidate and supported by the
   Boston Area Research Initiative Seed Grant as well as the Massachusetts
   Institute of Technology's Department of Urban Studies and Planning
   (DUSP) Emerson Travel Grant and Lynne Sagalyn and Gary Hack DUSP Fund.
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NR 61
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 2
U2 29
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0961-3218
EI 1466-4321
J9 BUILD RES INF
JI Build. Res. Informat.
PD JAN 2
PY 2020
VL 48
IS 1
BP 84
EP 100
DI 10.1080/09613218.2019.1642731
EA AUG 2019
PG 17
WC Construction & Building Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology
GA JB8AH
UT WOS:000479891700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Morchain, D
   Spear, D
   Ziervogel, G
   Masundire, H
   Angula, MN
   Davies, J
   Molefe, C
   Hegga, S
AF Morchain, Daniel
   Spear, Dian
   Ziervogel, Gina
   Masundire, Hillary
   Angula, Margaret N.
   Davies, Julia
   Molefe, Chandapiwa
   Hegga, Salma
TI Building transformative capacity in southern Africa: Surfacing knowledge
   and challenging structures through participatory Vulnerability and Risk
   Assessments
SO ACTION RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability assessment; adaptation; Southern Africa; participatory
   process; transformative capacity; climate change
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION
AB Although participatory approaches are becoming more widespread, to date vulnerability assessments have largely been conducted by technocrats and have paid little attention to underlying causes of vulnerability, such as inequality and biased governance systems. Participatory assessments that recognise the social roots of vulnerability, however, are critical in helping individuals and institutions rethink their understanding of and responses to climate change impacts. This paper interrogates the contribution of Oxfam's Vulnerability and Risk Assessment methodology to enabling transformation at both personal and institutional levels. Three Vulnerability and Risk Assessment exercises were conducted in Malawi, Botswana and Namibia by one or more of the authors in 2015 and 2016. Reflecting on these workshops, we explore the contribution that a process like the Vulnerability and Risk Assessment may bring to transformation. We conclude that these types of inclusive and representative participatory approaches can shift narratives and power dynamics, allow marginal voices to be heard, build cross-scalar relationships and enable the co-creation of solutions. Such approaches can play a key role in moving towards transformational thinking and action, especially in relation to climate change adaptation.
C1 [Morchain, Daniel] Oxfam GB, Programme Strategy & Impact Team PSIT, Oxford, England.
   [Spear, Dian; Davies, Julia; Hegga, Salma] Univ Cape Town, African Climate & Dev Initiat, 6th Floor,Geol Sci Bldg,Univ Ave South, ZA-7700 Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Ziervogel, Gina] Univ Cape Town, Environm & Geograph Sci Bldg,South Lane, Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Masundire, Hillary; Molefe, Chandapiwa] Univ Botswana, Dept Biol Sci, Gaborone, Botswana.
   [Angula, Margaret N.] Univ Namibia, Dept Geog Hist & Environm Studies, Windhoek, Namibia.
C3 University of Cape Town; University of Cape Town; University of
   Botswana; University of Namibia
RP Spear, D (corresponding author), Univ Cape Town, African Climate & Dev Initiat, 6th Floor,Geol Sci Bldg,Univ Ave South, ZA-7700 Cape Town, South Africa.
EM dian.spear@gmail.com
RI Masundire, Hillary/KIH-7576-2024; Davies, Julia/H-4194-2011; Ziervogel,
   Gina/AAG-2945-2019; Spear, Dian/B-2469-2009
OI Angula, Margaret Ndapewa/0000-0002-3973-0225; Ziervogel,
   Gina/0000-0003-4219-6809; Spear, Dian/0000-0002-2417-3980
FU Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid Regions project (ASSAR); Collaborative
   Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia (CARIAA); UK
   Government's Department for International Development (DfID);
   International Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada; South African
   Department of Science and Technology
FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for
   the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Some of
   this work was carried out under the Adaptation at Scale in Semi-Arid
   Regions project (ASSAR). ASSAR is one of four research programmes funded
   under the Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and
   Asia (CARIAA), with financial support from the UK Government's
   Department for International Development (DfID) and the International
   Development Research Centre (IDRC), Canada. The views expressed in this
   work are those of the creators and do not necessarily represent those of
   DfID and IDRC or its Board of Governors. The South African Department of
   Science and Technology is also acknowledged for funding some of this
   research.
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NR 24
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 10
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 1476-7503
EI 1741-2617
J9 ACTION RES-LONDON
JI Action Res.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 17
IS 1
SI SI
BP 19
EP 41
DI 10.1177/1476750319829205
PG 23
WC Management; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA HP1JY
UT WOS:000461424200004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Misra, M
AF Misra, Manoj
TI Smallholder agriculture and climate change adaptation in Bangladesh:
   questioning the technological optimism
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE smallholder agriculture; sustainable adaptation; climate resilient
   cultivars; technological optimism; Bangladesh
ID GREEN-REVOLUTION; VULNERABILITY; IMPACTS; FLOODS
AB This paper offers an in-depth sociological analysis of how the interplay of climatic factors, agricultural technologies and markets shapes smallholder livelihoods in Bangladesh to help sketch the outline for a sustainable agricultural adaptation strategy. It intends to question the technological optimism inherent in mainstream climate change policy discourse by highlighting the multiple sources of vulnerabilities of smallholder peasants in Bangladesh. Using findings from a qualitative study, it demonstrates how smallholders in Bangladesh currently experience climate change through their everyday agricultural practices, and how climate change along with the ecosystem destruction from modern farming technologies adversely affects their livelihoods. Drawing on the recent literature on sustainable adaptation, this paper argues that any agricultural adaptation strategy in Bangladesh must analyse the vulnerabilities of farming communities at the intersection of their geographically specific exposure to climatic threats, the extent of their market participation and the socioecological implications of their technology adoption. It concludes that an eventual departure from the current rice monoculture pivoted on chemical dependence and an excessive use of natural resources is the prerequisite for a sustainable agricultural adaptation.
C1 [Misra, Manoj] Hankuk Univ Foreign Studies, Grad Sch Int & Area Studies, Dept UPEACE, 107 Imun Ro, Seoul 130791, South Korea.
C3 Hankuk University Foreign Studies
RP Misra, M (corresponding author), Hankuk Univ Foreign Studies, Grad Sch Int & Area Studies, Dept UPEACE, 107 Imun Ro, Seoul 130791, South Korea.
EM manoj.dhk@gmail.com
OI Misra, Manoj/0000-0003-4887-2927
FU Hankuk University of Foreign Studies Research Fund
FX This work was supported by Hankuk University of Foreign Studies Research
   Fund.
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NR 47
TC 21
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 18
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PY 2017
VL 9
IS 4
BP 337
EP 347
DI 10.1080/17565529.2016.1145101
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EU1SA
UT WOS:000400799100005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sousa-Silva, R
   Ponette, Q
   Verheyen, K
   Van Herzele, A
   Muys, B
AF Sousa-Silva, Rita
   Ponette, Quentin
   Verheyen, Kris
   Van Herzele, Ann
   Muys, Bart
TI Adaptation of forest management to climate change as perceived by forest
   owners and managers in Belgium
SO FOREST ECOSYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; CHANGE IMPACTS; PERCEPTIONS; SCIENCE
AB Background: Climate change is likely to cause significant modifications in forests. Rising to this challenge may require adaptation of forest management, and therefore should trigger proactive measures by forest managers, but it is unclear to what extent this is already happening.
   Methods: The survey carried out in this research assesses how forest stakeholders in Belgium perceive the role of their forest management in the context of climate change and the impediments that limit their ability to prepare and respond to these changes.
   Results: Respondents indicated strong awareness of the changing climate, with more than two-thirds (71 %) expressing concern about the impacts of climate change on their forests. However, less than one-third of the respondents (32 %) reported modifying their management practices motivated by climate change. Among the major constraints limiting their climate related actions, lack of information was considered the most important for managers of both public and private forests.
   Conclusions: Knowledge transfer is an essential condition for research to lead to innovation. Improving the communication and demonstration of possible solutions for climate change adaptation is therefore likely to be the most effective strategy for increasing their adoption.
C1 [Sousa-Silva, Rita; Muys, Bart] Katholieke Univ Leuven, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Celestijnenlaan 200E,Box 2411, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium.
   [Ponette, Quentin] Catholic Univ Louvain, Earth & Life Inst, Environm Sci, Croix Sud 2,Box L7-05-09, B-1348 Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
   [Verheyen, Kris] Univ Ghent, Forest & Nat Lab, Geraardsbergsesteenweg 267, B-9090 Melle Gontrode, Belgium.
   [Van Herzele, Ann] Res Inst Nat & Forest INBO, Nat & Soc Res Grp, Kliniekstr 25, B-1070 Brussels, Belgium.
   [Muys, Bart] Forest Inst EFIMED, Sant Pau Hist Site,Sant Leopold Pavil, Barcelona 08025, Spain.
C3 KU Leuven; Universite Catholique Louvain; Ghent University; Research
   Institute for Nature & Forest
RP Sousa-Silva, R; Muys, B (corresponding author), Katholieke Univ Leuven, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Celestijnenlaan 200E,Box 2411, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium.; Muys, B (corresponding author), Forest Inst EFIMED, Sant Pau Hist Site,Sant Leopold Pavil, Barcelona 08025, Spain.
EM anarita.silva@kuleuven.be; bart.muys@kuleuven.be
RI Muys, Bart/ABN-3906-2022; Muys, Bart/A-3194-2015; Sousa-Silva,
   Rita/K-9520-2013
OI Ponette, Quentin/0000-0002-2726-7392; Muys, Bart/0000-0001-9421-527X;
   Sousa-Silva, Rita/0000-0001-8640-6121; Verheyen,
   Kris/0000-0002-2067-9108; Van Herzele, Ann/0000-0002-8289-7231
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NR 54
TC 46
Z9 50
U1 3
U2 18
PU KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
PI BEIJING
PA 16 DONGHUANGCHENGGEN NORTH ST, Building 5, Room 411, BEIJING, DONGCHENG
   DISTRICT 100009, PEOPLES R CHINA
SN 2095-6355
EI 2197-5620
J9 FOR ECOSYST
JI For. Ecosyst.
PD SEP 16
PY 2016
VL 3
AR 22
DI 10.1186/s40663-016-0082-7
PG 11
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA EF0SA
UT WOS:000390035000001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wilkin, KM
   Ackerly, DD
   Stephens, SL
AF Wilkin, Kate M.
   Ackerly, David D.
   Stephens, Scott L.
TI Climate Change Refugia, Fire Ecology and Management
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE mixed conifer forest; arid forest; fire ecology; fire management;
   refugia; climate change; vulnerability
ID SIERRA-NEVADA; BOREAL FOREST; NATIONAL-PARK; MEGA-FIRES; CONSERVATION;
   SEVERITY; RIPARIAN; WILDFIRE; REGIMES; PHYLOGEOGRAPHY
AB Early climate change ideas warned of widespread species extinctions. As scientists have probed more deeply into species responses, a more nuanced perspective emerged indicating that some species may persist in microrefugia (refugia), including in mountainous terrain. Refugia are habitats that buffer climate changes and allow species to persist in-and to potentially expand under-changing environmental conditions. While climate and species interactions in refugia have been noted as sources of uncertainty, land management practices and disturbances, such as wildland fire, should also be considered when assessing any given refugium. Our landscape scale study suggests that cold-air pools, an important type of small-scale refugia, have unique fire occurrence, frequency, and severity patterns in frequent-fire mixed conifer forests of California's Sierra Nevada: cold-air pool refugia have less fire and if it occurs, it is lower severity. Therefore, individuals and small populations are less likely to be extirpated by fire. Active management, such as restoration and fuels treatments for climate change adaptation, may be required to maintain these distinctive and potentially important refugia.
C1 [Wilkin, Kate M.; Stephens, Scott L.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
   [Ackerly, David D.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Integrat Biol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley;
   University of California System; University of California Berkeley
RP Wilkin, KM (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
EM Kate.Wilkin@berkeley.edu; dackerly@berkeley.edu; sstephens@berkeley.edu
RI Stephens, Scott L./LZE-8966-2025; Ackerly, David/A-1247-2009
OI Ackerly, David/0000-0002-1847-7398
FU Ecological Society of America
FX The George Melendez Wright Youth Climate Change Initiative supported
   Wilkin for this project that catalyzed National Park Service
   collaborations that enriched the final product. Special thanks to
   Yosemite National Park employees (Alison Colwell, Martin Hutten, Kent
   Van Wagtendonk, Mitzi Thornley, and Linda Mazzu) and Devils Postpile
   National Monument employees (Monica Buhler and Deanna Dulen) for their
   support with project development, grant and manuscript reviews, and
   their insights into managing climate change refugia. This paper would
   not have been possible without the Climate Refugia Workshop in Eugene,
   Oregon in August of 2012 sponsored by the Ecological Society of America.
   K. W. is grateful to those who coordinated this meeting (Dan Gavin and
   Erin Herring) and the participants who inspired analysis of refugia
   management for the future with climate change, especially Zack Holden
   and Arndt Hampe. Special thanks to Jessica Lundquist for fostering a
   sound understanding of cold-air pools and to Axel Kuhn for producing and
   sharing a Sierra Nevada data layer based on Lundquist (2008).
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NR 75
TC 34
Z9 37
U1 11
U2 93
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD APR
PY 2016
VL 7
IS 4
AR 77
DI 10.3390/f7040077
PG 14
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA DK8WY
UT WOS:000375210700005
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gentle, P
   Thwaites, R
   Race, D
   Alexander, K
AF Gentle, Popular
   Thwaites, Rik
   Race, Digby
   Alexander, Kim
TI Differential impacts of climate change on communities in the middle
   hills region of Nepal
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Rural livelihoods; Vulnerability; Adaptive capacity;
   Nepal
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; WEALTH RANKING; VULNERABILITY; PRECIPITATION;
   MITIGATION; VICINITY; HIMALAYA; TRENDS
AB There is a growing understanding that the impacts of climate change affect different communities within a country, in a variety of ways-not always uniformly. This article reports on research conducted in the middle hills region of Nepal that explored climate change vulnerability in terms of exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity across different well-being groups, genders of the head of household and household location. In the study region, dry land farming has increasingly experienced climate-induced changes to farm productivity and natural resources. The experience of vulnerability to decreased livelihood options and natural resource hazards due to a changing climate varied according to household wealth and well-being status, with very poor and poor households more vulnerable than medium and well-off households. The research indicates that the climate change adaptation would benefit by considering: (i) differential impacts of vulnerability mainly based on well-being status of households; (ii) understanding of the local sociopolitical context and underlying causes of vulnerability and its application; and (iii) identifying vulnerable populations for the units of vulnerability analysis and adaptation planning.
C1 [Gentle, Popular; Thwaites, Rik; Race, Digby; Alexander, Kim] Charles Sturt Univ, Sch Environm Sci, Albury, NSW 2640, Australia.
   [Race, Digby] Australian Natl Univ, Fenner Sch Environm & Soc, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia.
   [Alexander, Kim] Univ Wollongong, Wollongong, NSW, Australia.
C3 Charles Sturt University; Australian National University; University of
   Wollongong
RP Gentle, P (corresponding author), Charles Sturt Univ, Sch Environm Sci, POB 789, Albury, NSW 2640, Australia.
EM pgentle@csu.edu.au
RI Gentle, Popular/P-8488-2019; Alexander, Kim Suzanne/C-1800-2019
OI Alexander, Kim Suzanne/0000-0002-9015-1683; Thwaites,
   Richard/0000-0001-9343-039X; Gentle, Popular/0000-0001-7342-5120
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NR 77
TC 58
Z9 65
U1 1
U2 63
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD NOV
PY 2014
VL 74
IS 2
BP 815
EP 836
DI 10.1007/s11069-014-1218-0
PG 22
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA AQ6HD
UT WOS:000342910400028
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhou, QQ
   Panduro, TE
   Thorsen, BJ
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, K
AF Zhou, Qianqian
   Panduro, Toke Emil
   Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten
TI Adaption to Extreme Rainfall with Open Urban Drainage System: An
   Integrated Hydrological Cost-Benefit Analysis
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Hedonic valuation; Urban green areas; Water; Urban drainage; Climate
   change
ID FLOOD RISK-ASSESSMENT; COPENHAGEN; MANAGEMENT; RUNOFF; CATCHMENT;
   FRAMEWORK; IMPACT
AB This paper presents a cross-disciplinary framework for assessment of climate change adaptation to increased precipitation extremes considering pluvial flood risk as well as additional environmental services provided by some of the adaptation options. The ability of adaptation alternatives to cope with extreme rainfalls is evaluated using a quantitative flood risk approach based on urban inundation modeling and socio-economic analysis of corresponding costs and benefits. A hedonic valuation model is applied to capture the local economic gains or losses from more water bodies in green areas. The framework was applied to the northern part of the city of Aarhus, Denmark. We investigated four adaptation strategies that encompassed laissez-faire, larger sewer pipes, local infiltration units, and open drainage system in the urban green structure. We found that when taking into account environmental amenity effects, an integration of open drainage basins in urban recreational areas is likely the best adaptation strategy, followed by pipe enlargement and local infiltration strategies. All three were improvements compared to the fourth strategy of no measures taken.
C1 [Zhou, Qianqian; Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten] Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
   [Panduro, Toke Emil] Univ Copenhagen, Fac Sci, Dept Food & Resource Econ, Frederiksberg C, Denmark.
   [Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Food & Resource Econ, Frederiksberg C, Denmark.
   [Thorsen, Bo Jellesmark] Univ Copenhagen, Fac Sci, Ctr Macroecol Evolut & Climate, Frederiksberg C, Denmark.
C3 Technical University of Denmark; University of Copenhagen; University of
   Copenhagen; University of Copenhagen
RP Zhou, QQ (corresponding author), Tech Univ Denmark, Dept Environm Engn, Bldg 113, DK-2800 Lyngby, Denmark.
EM qiaz@env.dtu.dk
RI Zhou, Qianqian/GXG-4345-2022; Panduro, Toke Emil/D-3897-2015; Thorsen,
   Bo Jellesmark/K-8770-2014; Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten/J-7792-2012
OI Panduro, Toke Emil/0000-0002-1174-9063; Thorsen, Bo
   Jellesmark/0000-0002-3305-8343; Arnbjerg-Nielsen,
   Karsten/0000-0002-6221-9505
FU Aarhus Vand A/S; Grontmij; Danish National Science Foundation; Danish
   Strategic Research Council as part of the project "Center for Regional
   Change in the Earth System'' [09-066868]
FX Panduro acknowledges support from the Aarhus Vand A/S and Grontmij.
   Thorsen acknowledges support from the Danish National Science
   Foundation. This study was partly carried out with the support of the
   Danish Strategic Research Council as part of the project "Center for
   Regional Change in the Earth System,'' contract no. 09-066868.
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NR 55
TC 62
Z9 69
U1 1
U2 148
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0364-152X
EI 1432-1009
J9 ENVIRON MANAGE
JI Environ. Manage.
PD MAR
PY 2013
VL 51
IS 3
BP 586
EP 601
DI 10.1007/s00267-012-0010-8
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 096PO
UT WOS:000315416900007
PM 23334752
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Holland, B
AF Holland, Breena
TI Procedural justice in local climate adaptation: political capabilities
   and transformational change
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Local climate adaptation; procedural justice; political capabilities;
   transformational adaptation; recognition justice; capabilities approach
ID BANGLADESH; GOVERNANCE; DISCOURSES; REFUGEES; POLICIES; VILLAGE
AB Climate adaptation politics presents both obstacles and opportunities for correcting inequities that leave some communities especially vulnerable to climate-related environmental harms. By revealing these obstacles and opportunities, theories of procedural justice can help to identify procedural reforms and political strategies that advance the interests of vulnerable populations. An account of procedural justice is proposed that foregrounds the capability for political control over one's environment, defined as having the political power to influence adaptation decisions. While the variables shaping this capability in the politics of environmental injustice often interact in ways that reproduce environmental inequities, adaptation politics has the potential to produce more transformational outcomes. To illustrate this potential, differences between the politics of environmental injustice and the politics of climate adaptation are drawn on to sketch the basic features of a typology of vulnerable populations' political capabilities in the politics of climate adaptation, before highlighting the potential points for intervention.
C1 [Holland, Breena] Lehigh Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA.
   [Holland, Breena] Lehigh Univ, Environm Initiat, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA.
C3 Lehigh University; Lehigh University
RP Holland, B (corresponding author), Lehigh Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA.; Holland, B (corresponding author), Lehigh Univ, Environm Initiat, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA.
EM brh205@lehigh.edu
RI Holland, Breena/AAP-9362-2020
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NR 57
TC 107
Z9 124
U1 4
U2 53
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-4016
EI 1743-8934
J9 ENVIRON POLIT
JI Environ. Polit.
PY 2017
VL 26
IS 3
BP 391
EP 412
DI 10.1080/09644016.2017.1287625
PG 22
WC Environmental Studies; Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law
GA ES7HF
UT WOS:000399719800002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gerlak, AK
   Elder, A
   Pavao-Zuckerman, M
   Zuniga-Teran, A
   Sanderford, AR
AF Gerlak, Andrea K.
   Elder, Alison
   Pavao-Zuckerman, Mitch
   Zuniga-Teran, Adriana
   Sanderford, Andrew R.
TI Agency and governance in green infrastructure policy adoption and change
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Green infrastructure; agency; governance; cities; entrepreneurs
ID PATHWAYS; DESERT
AB Green Infrastructure (GI) is being adopted in cities all around the world as a key piece of climate change adaptation and water management for local governments. Recognizing that there is increasingly a diversity of actors engaged in designing, implementing, and fostering GI policies, we aim to better understand how urban GI policies take shape over time. We draw from two bodies of scholarship - - agency in Earth System Governance and entrepreneurs in public policy scholarship -- to study the agents who come to exercise authority to shape GI governance. We trace the trajectory of urban GI practices and policy over the past two decades, keenly observing how GI policies are adopted and change over time. We focus on Tucson, Arizona and combine document analysis, key informant interviews, and participation in stakeholder meetings with an innovative timeline method we collaboratively developed with stakeholders to identify the key events and actors in GI policy adoption. Our findings suggest diverse yet, interconnected roles for entrepreneurs highlighting how agency is exercised, how learning occurs and takes shape across entrepreneurs and scales, and how inequities are realized and addressed.
C1 [Gerlak, Andrea K.] Univ Arizona, Udall Ctr Studies Publ Policy, Sch Geog Dev & Environm, Tucson, AZ 85719 USA.
   [Elder, Alison] Univ Arizona, Sch Geog Dev & Environm, Tucson, AZ USA.
   [Pavao-Zuckerman, Mitch] Univ Arizona, Univ Maryland, Environm Sci & Technol, College Pk, MD USA.
   [Zuniga-Teran, Adriana] Udall Ctr Studies Publ Policy, Sch Landscape Architecture & Planning, Tucson, AZ USA.
   [Sanderford, Andrew R.] Univ Virginia, McIntire Sch Commerce, Charlottesville, VA USA.
C3 University of Arizona; University of Arizona; University of Arizona;
   University System of Maryland; University of Maryland College Park;
   University of Virginia
RP Gerlak, AK (corresponding author), Univ Arizona, Udall Ctr Studies Publ Policy, Sch Geog Dev & Environm, Tucson, AZ 85719 USA.
EM agerlak@email.arizona.edu
RI Zuniga-Teran, Adriana/HIK-2468-2022
OI Pavao-Zuckerman, Mitchell/0000-0002-9657-2892; Zuniga-Teran,
   Adriana/0000-0003-2912-2469
FU U.S. National Science Foundation [1518376]; Directorate For Geosciences;
   Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [1518376] Funding Source: National
   Science Foundation
FX This work was supported by U.S. National Science Foundation: [Grant
   Number Award Number:1518376 Project Title:CNH-L: Linking Ecosystem
   Services and Governance of Water Resources in Urbanized Landscapes].
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NR 88
TC 16
Z9 19
U1 5
U2 23
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PD SEP 3
PY 2021
VL 23
IS 5
SI SI
BP 599
EP 615
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2021.1910018
EA APR 2021
PG 17
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA US3QN
UT WOS:000636598100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Müller, M
   Kempen, T
   Finkeldey, R
   Gailing, O
AF Mueller, Markus
   Kempen, Tanja
   Finkeldey, Reiner
   Gailing, Oliver
TI Low Population Differentiation but High Phenotypic Plasticity of
   European Beech in Germany
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; drought; Fagaceae; genetics; growth;
   increment; plant height; seedlings
ID FAGUS-SYLVATICA L.; FOREST TREES; DROUGHT; PROVENANCES; TEMPERATURE;
   ADAPTATION; RESPONSES; RANGE; VARIABILITY; SEEDLINGS
AB Drought is increasingly impairing the vitality of European beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) in several regions of its distribution range. In times of climate change, adaptive traits such as plant phenology and frost tolerance are also becoming more important. Adaptive patterns of European beech seem to be complex, as contrasting results regarding the relative effect of phenotypic plasticity and genetic variation in trait variation have been reported. Here, we used a large translocation experiment comprising more than 15,500 seedlings in three regions of Germany to investigate local adaptation and phenotypic plasticity in beech. We found low population differentiation regarding plant survival, and plant height increment, but high phenotypic plasticity for these traits. Survival showed a positive correlation with temperature variables and a less pronounced and negative correlation with precipitation-related variables. This suggests a predominant effect of temperature and growing degree days on the survival of beech seedlings under moderate drought stress. The high phenotypic plasticity may help beech to cope with changing environmental conditions, albeit increasing drought stress may make adaptive changes necessary in the long term.
C1 [Mueller, Markus; Kempen, Tanja; Gailing, Oliver] Univ Goettingen, Fac Forest Sci & Forest Ecol, Forest Genet & Forest Tree Breeding, Busgenweg 2, D-37077 Gottingen, Germany.
   [Finkeldey, Reiner] Univ Kassel, Monchebergstr 19, D-34109 Kassel, Germany.
   [Gailing, Oliver] Univ Goettingen, Ctr Integrated Breeding Res CiBreed, D-37073 Gottingen, Germany.
C3 University of Gottingen; Universitat Kassel; University of Gottingen
RP Gailing, O (corresponding author), Univ Goettingen, Fac Forest Sci & Forest Ecol, Forest Genet & Forest Tree Breeding, Busgenweg 2, D-37077 Gottingen, Germany.; Gailing, O (corresponding author), Univ Goettingen, Ctr Integrated Breeding Res CiBreed, D-37073 Gottingen, Germany.
EM mmuellef@gwdg.de; tanja.kempen@stud.uni-goettingen.de;
   praesident@uni-kassel.de; ogailin@gwdg.de
RI Gailing, Oliver/X-2690-2019; Müller, Markus/LWI-9304-2024; Finkeldey,
   Reiner/ABD-4392-2021
OI Gailing, Oliver/0000-0002-4572-2408; Muller, Markus/0000-0001-9990-0719;
   Kempen, Tanja/0009-0007-0586-2370; Finkeldey, Reiner/0000-0003-3500-5656
FU DFG Priority Program 1374 "Infrastructure-Biodiversity-Exploratories"
   [Fi 569/12-2]; Gottingen University
FX The work has been funded by the DFG Priority Program 1374
   "Infrastructure-Biodiversity-Exploratories" (grant number Fi 569/12-2).
   We acknowledge support by the Open Access Publication Funds of the
   Gottingen University.
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NR 61
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 0
U2 16
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 11
IS 12
AR 1354
DI 10.3390/f11121354
PG 14
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA PJ7LO
UT WOS:000601944400001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cacho, OJ
   Moss, J
   Thornton, PK
   Herrero, M
   Henderson, B
   Bodirsky, BL
   Humpenöder, F
   Popp, A
   Lipper, L
AF Cacho, Oscar J.
   Moss, Jonathan
   Thornton, Philip K.
   Herrero, Mario
   Henderson, Ben
   Bodirsky, Benjamin L.
   Humpenoeder, Florian
   Popp, Alexander
   Lipper, Leslie
TI The value of climate-resilient seeds for smallholder adaptation in
   sub-Saharan Africa
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Smallholders; Improved seeds; Climate policy
ID FOOD SECURITY; SYSTEMS; CROP; AGRICULTURE; LIVESTOCK; REDUCE; IMPACT;
   YIELDS
AB Climate change is threatening food security in many tropical countries, where a large proportion of food is produced by vulnerable smallholder farmers. Interventions are available to offset many of the negative impacts of climate change on agriculture, and they can be tailored to local conditions often through relative modest investments. However, little quantitative information is available to guide investment or policy choices at a time when countries and development agencies are under pressure to implement policies that can help achieve Sustainable Development Goals while coping with climate change. Among smallholder adaptation options, developing seeds resilient to current and future climate shocks expected locally is one of the most important actions available now. In this paper, we used national and local data to estimate the costs of climate change to smallholder farmers in Malawi and Tanzania. We found that the benefits from adopting resilient seeds ranged between 984 million and 2.1 billion USD during 2020-2050. Our analysis demonstrates the benefits of establishing and maintaining a flexible national seed sector with participation by communities in the breeding, delivery, and adoption cycle.
C1 [Cacho, Oscar J.; Moss, Jonathan] Univ New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
   [Thornton, Philip K.] Int Livestock Res Inst ILRI, Agr & Food Secur CCAFS, CGIAR Res Program Climate Change, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Herrero, Mario; Henderson, Ben] CSIRO, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Henderson, Ben] Org Econ Cooperat & Dev, Paris, France.
   [Bodirsky, Benjamin L.; Humpenoeder, Florian; Popp, Alexander] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Lipper, Leslie] CGIAR, Independent Sci & Partnership Council, Rome, Italy.
C3 University of New England; CGIAR; International Livestock Research
   Institute (ILRI); Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO); Organisation for Economic Co-operation &
   Development (OECD); Potsdam Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung; CGIAR
RP Cacho, OJ (corresponding author), Univ New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
EM ocacho@une.edu.au
RI Bodirsky, Benjamin/ABH-9170-2020; Popp, Alexander/N-7064-2014; Thornton,
   Philip/AAB-8806-2020; Cacho, Oscar/F-3012-2011; Moss,
   Jonathan/AAV-8620-2021; Herrero, Mario/A-6678-2015; Humpenoder,
   Florian/HHN-1081-2022
OI Cacho, Oscar/0000-0002-1542-4442; Thornton, Philip/0000-0002-1854-0182;
   Herrero, Mario/0000-0002-7741-5090; Humpenoder,
   Florian/0000-0003-2927-9407
FU Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO); CGIAR
   Fund Donors; CSIRO Science Leaders Programme; FACCE/JPI Belmont Forum
FX This work was funded by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the
   United Nations (FAO). We are grateful to the EPIC team at FAO for
   providing data and support; Aslihan Aslan and Caterina Sucameli provided
   clean datasets for Malawi and Tanzania. PKT acknowledges support
   provided to the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture
   and Food Security (CCAFS) from CGIAR Fund Donors, and through bilateral
   funding agreements (please see ccafs.cgiar.org/donors). MH and BH
   acknowledge support from the CSIRO Science Leaders Programme and the
   FACCE/JPI Belmont Forum funded DEVIL project (Delivering Food Security
   on Limited Land).
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Z9 30
U1 1
U2 21
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD OCT
PY 2020
VL 162
IS 3
BP 1213
EP 1229
DI 10.1007/s10584-020-02817-z
EA AUG 2020
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA OF2RW
UT WOS:000568594200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, YX
   Zhang, J
   Tadikamalla, PR
   Zhou, L
AF Chen, Yingxin
   Zhang, Jing
   Tadikamalla, Pandu R.
   Zhou, Lei
TI The Mechanism of Social Organization Participation in Natural Hazards
   Emergency Relief: A Case Study Based on the Social Network Analysis
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE natural hazards; emergency relief; social network analysis; public
   participation; social organization; participation mechanism
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; PUBLIC-PARTICIPATION; PERFORMANCE;
   RESILIENCE; GOVERNANCE; MANAGEMENT; NONPROFIT; FLOOD; INITIATIVES;
   FRAMEWORK
AB The uncertainty and complexity of natural hazards put forward new requirements for emergency management systems. In order to deal with natural hazards effectively, it is important to build a cooperative network between government organizations and social organizations. The social network analysis method is adopted, the April 2013 Ya'an China earthquake is taken as a case study, the institutionalized emergency organization network before the disaster and the actual response organization network after the disaster are analyzed, and centrality, between centrality, closeness centrality and core-periphery are calculated. Through qualitative and quantitative research, the functions of social organization in the process of natural hazards emergency relief are revealed, the role orientation of social organization in the emergency management network is analyzed, and the influence factors of the social organization participation in the natural hazards relief is pointed out. Research results will help to promote the cooperation between social organization and government, and improve the efficiency of natural hazards emergency relief.
C1 [Chen, Yingxin; Zhou, Lei] Harbin Engn Univ, Sch Econ & Management, Harbin 150001, Heilongjiang, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Jing] Univ Jinan, Sch Informat Sci & Engn, Jinan 250022, Shandong, Peoples R China.
   [Tadikamalla, Pandu R.] Univ Pittsburgh, Joseph M Katz Grad Sch Business, Pittsburgh, PA 15260 USA.
C3 Harbin Engineering University; University of Jinan; Pennsylvania
   Commonwealth System of Higher Education (PCSHE); University of
   Pittsburgh
RP Zhang, J (corresponding author), Univ Jinan, Sch Informat Sci & Engn, Jinan 250022, Shandong, Peoples R China.
EM chenyxdingdang@hrbeu.edu.cn; ise_zhangjing@ujn.edu.cn;
   Pandu@katz.pitt.edu; zhoulei960918@163.com
FU National Social Science Fund of China [17BGL181]
FX This research is funded by the National Social Science Fund of China
   (NO.17BGL181).
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NR 50
TC 29
Z9 30
U1 20
U2 174
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD NOV
PY 2019
VL 16
IS 21
AR 4110
DI 10.3390/ijerph16214110
PG 20
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA JQ3IF
UT WOS:000498842000056
PM 31731419
OA Green Accepted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Eekhout, JPC
   de Vente, J
AF Eekhout, J. P. C.
   de Vente, J.
TI Assessing the effectiveness of Sustainable Land Management for
   large-scale climate change adaptation
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainability; Rainfed agriculture; Soil erosion; Hydrological impact;
   Water security
ID SOIL-EROSION; CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; ECOSYSTEM
   SERVICES; CATCHMENT SCALE; EURO-CORDEX; CHECK-DAMS; RUNOFF; IMPACT;
   PRECIPITATION
AB Climate change will strongly affect essential ecosystem services, like the provision of freshwater, food production, soil erosion and flood control. Sustainable Land Management (SLM) practices are increasingly promoted to contribute to climate change mitigation and adaptation, but there is lack of evidence at scales most relevant for policymaking. We evaluated the effectiveness of SLM in a large Mediterranean catchment where climate change is projected to significantly reduce water security. We show that the on-site and off-site impacts of climate change are almost entirely reversed by the large-scale implementation of SLM under moderate climate change conditions, characterized by limited reductions in annual precipitation but significant increased precipitation intensity. Under more extreme reductions of annual precipitation, SLM implementation reduces the impacts on water security, but cannot prevent significant increased plant water stress and reduced water availability. Under these conditions, additional adaptation measures are required considering their interactions and trade-offs regarding water security. (C) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Eekhout, J. P. C.; de Vente, J.] CSIC, CEBAS, Soil Eros & Conservat Res Grp, Spanish Res Council, Campus Espinardo,POB 164, Murcia 30100, Spain.
C3 Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC); CSIC - Centro de
   Edafologia y Biologia Aplicada del Segura (CEBAS)
RP Eekhout, JPC (corresponding author), CSIC, CEBAS, Soil Eros & Conservat Res Grp, Spanish Res Council, Campus Espinardo,POB 164, Murcia 30100, Spain.
EM joriseekhout@gmail.com
RI de Vente, Joris/C-1304-2012; Eekhout, Joris/B-3146-2016
OI de Vente, Joris/0000-0001-7428-0621; Eekhout, Joris/0000-0003-2097-696X
FU "Juan de la Cierva" program of the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y
   Competitividad [FJCI-2016-28905]; Spanish Ministerio de Economia y
   Competitividad (ADAPT project) [CGL2013-42009-R]; Seneca Foundation of
   the regional government of Murcia (CAMBIO project) [118933/JLI/13]
FX We acknowledge financial support from the "Juan de la Cierva" program of
   the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (FJCI-2016-28905),
   the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (ADAPT project;
   CGL2013-42009-R), and the Seneca Foundation of the regional government
   of Murcia (CAMBIO project; 118933/JLI/13). The authors thank AEMET and
   UC for the data provided for this work (Spain02 v5 dataset, available at
   http://www.meteo.unican.es/datasets/spain02). The authors thank the two
   anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments on the manuscript.
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NR 65
TC 30
Z9 33
U1 1
U2 38
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD MAR 1
PY 2019
VL 654
BP 85
EP 93
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.10.350
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HL3QE
UT WOS:000458630100010
PM 30445333
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Trajber, R
   Walker, C
   Marchezini, V
   Kraftl, P
   Olivato, D
   Hadfield-Hill, S
   Zara, C
   Monteiro, SF
AF Trajber, Rachel
   Walker, Catherine
   Marchezini, Victor
   Kraftl, Peter
   Olivato, Debora
   Hadfield-Hill, Sophie
   Zara, Cristiana
   Monteiro, Shirley Fernandes
TI Promoting climate change transformation with young people in Brazil:
   participatory action research through a looping approach
SO ACTION RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Young people; participatory action research; environmental education;
   disaster risk reduction; food-water-energy nexus; climate change
   adaptation
ID POLITICS; YOUTH; ADAPTATION; EDUCATION; CHILDREN
AB Amid research into the mounting social and environmental threats presented by climate change, young people's everyday experiences and knowledges are often overlooked, despite being the generation that will be most affected by climate change. We present a 'looping' methodology, developed through collaborative work between two distinct but complementary research projects wherein young people in the Paraiba do Sul watershed, Sao Paulo state, Brazil shared their perspectives on (respectively) climate-related disasters and the food-water-energy nexus. The approach brings together the theoretical framings of citizen science and nexus thinking under the aegis of participatory action research, to identify points of mutual learning in relation to the knowledge, action and critique co-produced with young people. This 'looping methodology' enables meta-analytic insights into how participatory action research, looped with other forms of action-oriented research, can enable young people and other protagonists to articulate and act upon the complex, multi-scalar processes that characterise what it means to live in uncertain social, political and environmental times.
C1 [Trajber, Rachel] Cemaden, Natl Early Warning & Monitoring Ctr Nat Disasters, Transit Sustainabil & Resilience Socioenvironm Di, Sao Jose Dos Campos, SP, Brazil.
   [Walker, Catherine] Univ Manchester, Sustainable Consumpt Inst, Manchester, Lancs, England.
   [Marchezini, Victor; Olivato, Debora] Cemaden, Sao Jose Dos Campos, SP, Brazil.
   [Kraftl, Peter] Univ Birmingham, Human Geog, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
   [Hadfield-Hill, Sophie] Univ Birmingham, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
   [Zara, Cristiana] Univ Birmingham, Sch Geog Earth & Environm Sci, Birmingham, W Midlands, England.
   [Monteiro, Shirley Fernandes] Escola Estadual Paulo Virginio, Cachoeira Paulista, SP, Brazil.
C3 University of Manchester; University of Birmingham; University of
   Birmingham; University of Birmingham
RP Walker, C (corresponding author), Univ Manchester, Manchester, Lancs, England.
EM catherine.walker-2@manchester.ac.uk
RI ; Kraftl, Peter/L-9752-2015; Marchezini, Victor/Q-4002-2016
OI Walker, Catherine/0000-0003-3390-9272; Zara,
   Cristiana/0000-0003-0129-324X; Kraftl, Peter/0000-0002-7915-4808;
   Marchezini, Victor/0000-0002-1974-0960
FU UK Economic & Social Research Council (ESRC) [ES/K00932X/1]; Sao Paulo
   Research Foundation (FAPESP) [15/50226-0]; Brazilian Council for
   Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq); Fundacao de Amparo a
   Pesquisa do Estado de Sao Paulo (FAPESP) [15/50226-0] Funding Source:
   FAPESP; ESRC [ES/N013190/1, ES/K00932X/1, ES/S006982/1] Funding Source:
   UKRI; GCRF [EP/T015683/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for
   the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: The (Re)
   Connect the Nexus project was funded by the UK Economic & Social
   Research Council (ESRC grant reference: ES/K00932X/1) and the Sao Paulo
   Research Foundation (FAPESP process 15/50226-0). Rachel Trajber and
   Debora Olivato acknowledge the Brazilian Council for Scientific and
   Technological Development (CNPq) for their research scholarships for the
   Cemaden Education project.
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NR 49
TC 41
Z9 43
U1 2
U2 58
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 1476-7503
EI 1741-2617
J9 ACTION RES-LONDON
JI Action Res.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 17
IS 1
SI SI
BP 87
EP 107
DI 10.1177/1476750319829202
PG 21
WC Management; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA HP1JY
UT WOS:000461424200007
OA Green Submitted, Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sörensen, J
   Emilsson, T
AF Soerensen, J.
   Emilsson, T.
TI Evaluating Flood Risk Reduction by Urban Blue-Green Infrastructure Using
   Insurance Data
SO JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Extreme precipitation; Pluvial flooding; Best management practices
   (BMP); Green infrastructure (GI); Low impact development (LID);
   Sustainable urban drainage systems (SUDS)
ID RUNOFF; STORMWATER; DAMAGE; ROOF; DRAINAGE; IMPACTS; SWEDEN; MALMO
AB One of many important features of blue-green infrastructure is the ability to lower flood risks by detention of stormwater. This ability of flood risk reduction has for the first time been evaluated with empirical data in this study. In 2014, Malmo, Sweden, was hit with extreme precipitation corresponding to a return period of 50-200years that led to severe pluvial flooding. This and other large events presented the opportunity to evaluate the efficiency of the 15-year-old stormwater system retrofit in the Augustenborg area (30ha). Blue-green infrastructure is widely promoted for climate change adaptation, making this unique case important in the discussion of the capabilities of the related technical solutions. The long-term trends showed less flood damage in Augustenborg than in similar neighborhoods that have conventional sewer systems (combined or separate), indicating a direct effect of the retrofit with stormwater control measures. Even though a few properties were flooded in Augustenborg, it was shown that the retrofitted stormwater system performed successfully during the extreme event in 2014.
C1 [Soerensen, J.] Lund Univ, Dept Water Resources Engn, POB 118, S-22100 Lund, Sweden.
   [Emilsson, T.] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Landscape Architecture Planning & Management, Box 66, S-23053 Alnarp, Sweden.
C3 Lund University; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
RP Sörensen, J (corresponding author), Lund Univ, Dept Water Resources Engn, POB 118, S-22100 Lund, Sweden.
EM johanna.sorensen@tvrl.lth.se
RI Sörensen, Johanna/AAG-3189-2019
OI Emilsson, Tobias/0000-0001-9806-9652; Sorensen, Johanna
   Lykke/0000-0002-2312-4917
FU Formas [942-2015-149]; Vinnova project [2016-04254]; Vinnova
   [2016-04254] Funding Source: Vinnova
FX The authors thank Helen Nilsson from the insurance company
   Lansforsakringar Skane and Stefan Milotti from the utility company VA
   Syd for flood claim data. Susanne Steen Kronborg and Tomas Wolf from VA
   Syd are thanked for valuable data about the Malmo drainage system,
   rainfall data, etc. Cooperation with Lansforsakringar Skane was
   originally established by Joanna Theland during her master's thesis and
   she collected data from several companies and organizations that were
   used in this study together with complementary flood claim data received
   later. Thanks also to Malmo municipal housing company (MKB), Lifra
   (property manager), IF Skadeforsakring (insurance company), Moderna
   Forsakringar (insurance company), and Stadsfastigheter (property manager
   for Malmo City) for data. Lars Bengtsson and Rolf Larsson are thanked
   for their valuable comments to the manuscript, and Cintia Uvo are
   thanked for help with the statistical analysis. We would also like to
   thank edo Maksimovic at Imperial College London for the idea of
   assessing how Augustenborg was affected during the 2014 flood event. The
   criticisms from the anonymous reviewer helped in improving the paper.
   GIS data on urban areas, streets, etc. were distributed by the Swedish
   national mapping, cadastral, land registration authority: (c)
   Lantmateriet, Dnr: I2014/00579. This study was supported by a grant from
   Formas, No.942-2015-149 (Sustainable Urban Flood Management) and a
   Vinnova project, No.2016-04254 (Testbadd for gronbla urbana losningar).
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NR 61
TC 33
Z9 36
U1 9
U2 134
PU ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
PI RESTON
PA 1801 ALEXANDER BELL DR, RESTON, VA 20191-4400 USA
SN 0733-9496
EI 1943-5452
J9 J WATER RES PLAN MAN
JI J. Water Resour. Plan. Manage.-ASCE
PD FEB
PY 2019
VL 145
IS 2
AR 04018099
DI 10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0001037
PG 11
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA HE2ZP
UT WOS:000453220300013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lewis, DJ
   Polasky, S
AF Lewis, David J.
   Polasky, Stephen
TI An auction mechanism for the optimal provision of ecosystem services
   under climate change
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Ecosystem services; Conservation planning; Climate change adaptation;
   Spatial modeling; Land use; Auctions; Asymmetric information; Truthful
   mechanism; Irreversibility; Option value
ID AGGLOMERATION BONUS; REAL OPTIONS; CONSERVATION; BIODIVERSITY;
   UNCERTAINTY; INFORMATION; MANAGEMENT; HABITAT; FRAGMENTATION;
   PRESERVATION
AB The provision of many ecosystem services depends on the spatial pattern of land use across multiple landowners. Even holding land use constant, ecosystem service provision may change through time due to climate change. This paper develops an auction mechanism that implements an optimal solution for providing ecosystem services through time with multiple landowners who have private information about the net benefits of alternative uses of their land. Under the auction, each landowner has a dominant strategy to truthfully reveal their private information. With this information a regulator can then implement the optimal landscape pattern, which maximizes the present value of net benefits derived from the landscape, following the rules of the auction mechanism. The auction can be designed as a subsidy auction that pays landowners to conserve or a tax auction where landowners pay for the right to develop. Our mechanism optimizes social adaptation of ecosystem management to climate change. (C) 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
C1 [Lewis, David J.] Oregon State Univ, Dept Appl Econ, 200 A Ballard Ext Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
   [Polasky, Stephen] Univ Minnesota, Dept Appl Econ, 1994 Buford Ave, St Paul, MN 55108 USA.
C3 Oregon State University; University of Minnesota System; University of
   Minnesota Twin Cities
RP Lewis, DJ (corresponding author), Oregon State Univ, Dept Appl Econ, 200 A Ballard Ext Hall, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
EM lewisda@oregonstate.edu; polasky@umn.edu
RI Polasky, Stephen/AAC-5341-2019; Lewis, David/I-5700-2013
OI Lewis, David/0000-0002-2161-4189
FU USDA National Institute for Food and Agriculture [2017-67023-26275];
   USDA Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station
   [14-JV-11261955-059]; National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association
   (NOM), National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science [NA11OAR4320091A];
   NIFA [914778, 2017-67023-26275] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER
FX Lewis gratefully acknowledges funding support from the USDA National
   Institute for Food and Agriculture (#2017-67023-26275), the USDA Forest
   Service Pacific Northwest Research Station (#14-JV-11261955-059), and
   the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association (NOM), National Centers
   for Coastal Ocean Science (#NA11OAR4320091A). We are grateful to
   comments from seminar participants at the AERE Summer Conference (2015),
   the AERE sessions at the WEAL Annual Conference (2016), the University
   of Tennessee, Penn State University, the University of Minnesota, and
   Oregon State University. We are also grateful for comments from two
   anonymous reviewers and the editor, Till Requate.
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NR 62
TC 24
Z9 24
U1 3
U2 30
PU ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
PI SAN DIEGO
PA 525 B ST, STE 1900, SAN DIEGO, CA 92101-4495 USA
SN 0095-0696
EI 1096-0449
J9 J ENVIRON ECON MANAG
JI J.Environ.Econ.Manage.
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 92
BP 20
EP 34
DI 10.1016/j.jeem.2018.08.014
PG 15
WC Business; Economics; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HG4WK
UT WOS:000454975500002
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kniveton, DR
   Smith, CD
   Black, R
AF Kniveton, Dominic R.
   Smith, Christopher D.
   Black, Richard
TI Emerging migration flows in a changing climate in dryland Africa
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID UNEMPLOYMENT; MODEL
AB Fears of the movement of large numbers of people as a result of changes in the environment were first voiced in the 1980s (ref. 1). Nearly thirty years later the numbers likely to migrate as a result of the impacts of climate change are still, at best, guesswork(2). Owing to the high prevalence of rainfed agriculture, many livelihoods in sub-Saharan African drylands are particularly vulnerable to changes in climate. One commonly adopted response strategy used by populations to deal with the resulting livelihood stress is migration. Here, we use an agent-based model developed around the theory of planned behaviour to explore how climate and demographic change, defined by the ENSEMBLES project(3) and the United Nations Statistics Division of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs(4), combine to influence migration within and from Burkina Faso. The emergent migration patterns modelled support framing the nexus of climate change and migration as a complex adaptive system(5). Using this conceptual framework, we show that the extent of climate-change-related migration is likely to be highly nonlinear and the extent of this nonlinearity is dependent on population growth; therefore supporting migration policy interventions based on both demographic and climate change adaptation.
C1 [Kniveton, Dominic R.; Smith, Christopher D.; Black, Richard] Univ Sussex, Sch Global Studies, Dept Geog, Brighton BN1 9QJ, E Sussex, England.
C3 University of Sussex
RP Kniveton, DR (corresponding author), Univ Sussex, Sch Global Studies, Dept Geog, Brighton BN1 9QJ, E Sussex, England.
EM kafw3@sussex.ac.uk
OI Black, Richard/0000-0003-4276-2057; kniveton,
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FU ESRC/NERC
FX We thank B. Schoumaker for sharing the EMIUB database and C. Caminade
   for providing the ENSEMBLES data. This work was supported in part by an
   ESRC/NERC Interdisciplinary Studentship.
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TC 100
Z9 105
U1 5
U2 114
PU NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
PI LONDON
PA MACMILLAN BUILDING, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2012
VL 2
IS 6
BP 444
EP 447
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE1447
PG 4
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 955WM
UT WOS:000305051600026
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Grove, K
AF Grove, Kevin
TI Preempting the next disaster: Catastrophe insurance and the
   financialization of disaster management
SO SECURITY DIALOGUE
LA English
DT Article
DE insurance; biopolitics; adaptation; neoliberalism; preemption; disaster
   management; catastrophe risk
ID RISK; PREPAREDNESS
AB The 2007 launch of the Caribbean Catastrophic Risk Insurance Facility (CCRIF) introduced a new mechanism of state security against the uncertainties of climate change. Proponents argue that increasing the ability of member-states to finance disaster recovery through catastrophe insurance mitigates the effects of increasingly frequent and intense hurricanes and thus contributes to climate change adaptation. In contrast, I offer a critical analysis of the CCRIF that draws out how it facilitates what I call the 'financialization of disaster management'. The introduction of financial logics and techniques enables the state and capital to visualize a population's self-organizing adaptive capacity as both a threat to state-based forms of order and a value that can be leveraged on capital markets as catastrophe risk. Leveraging enhances a state's ability to repair its critical infrastructure and preemptively negate undesirable adaptations. The CCRIF blends risk pooling with parametric insurance techniques to turn the uncertainty surrounding a population's immanent adaptability into catastrophe risks that can be leveraged to enhance state security and capital accumulation in an emergent environment.
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RP Grove, K (corresponding author), Dartmouth Coll, Dept Geog, Hanover, NH 03755 USA.
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NR 56
TC 70
Z9 76
U1 1
U2 53
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0967-0106
EI 1460-3640
J9 SECUR DIALOGUE
JI Secur. Dialogue
PD APR
PY 2012
VL 43
IS 2
BP 139
EP 155
DI 10.1177/0967010612438434
PG 17
WC International Relations
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC International Relations
GA 926UD
UT WOS:000302856500003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jiang, YL
   Arnold, H
AF Jiang, Yuliang
   Arnold, Hadley
TI Traditional Water Systems Informing Sustainable Contemporary Drylands
   Design: Documentation, Extraction, and Deployment
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE landscape architecture; climate change; research-by-design; atlas;
   social practices; resilience; adaptation; indigenous knowledge;
   infrastructure
AB Climate change has become a pressing issue in cities around the globe, especially those in dry regions. Despite these cities' cultural vitality, water shortages are among the central problems impacting society. The aim of this study was to recapture, record, and rethink the world's traditional water systems with two objectives. The first objective was to scrutinize the mechanics, social functions, and spatial organization of these systems. The second objective was to develop novel adaptations of these old technologies for new discourses and apply them to the water-stressed urban landscapes of Los Angeles. The intent was to build a greater capacity for resilient landscape and infrastructure design in a post-carbon world by constructing a more robust lexicon of pre-carbon drylands design. Notable similarities surfaced among the systems despite their distinct cultural backgrounds and historical origins, indicating commonalities across the evolution of water infrastructure in human history. The output of this study established the basis for a systematic drylands atlas as a resource for research-informed design of the built environment. The outcomes make fundamental water-centric climate change adaptation strategies accessible through visual communication techniques for professional practices and pedagogic purposes.
C1 [Jiang, Yuliang] Univ Southern Calif, Sch Architecture, Landscape Justice Initiat, 850 Bloom Walk, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
   [Arnold, Hadley] Arid Lands Inst, 525 South Hewitt St, Los Angeles, CA 90013 USA.
   [Arnold, Hadley] DiviningLAB, 525 South Hewitt St, Los Angeles, CA 90013 USA.
C3 University of Southern California
RP Jiang, YL (corresponding author), Univ Southern Calif, Sch Architecture, Landscape Justice Initiat, 850 Bloom Walk, Los Angeles, CA 90089 USA.
EM yuliangj@usc.edu
RI Jiang, Yuliang/HLX-4528-2023
OI Jiang, Yuliang/0000-0003-2219-809X
FU Gesundheit Family/USC Architectural Guild Graduate Traveling Fellowship
   (2019); William and Neoma Timme Travelling Fellowship (2019); USC School
   of Architecture; Wright-Ingraham Foundation
FX The Gesundheit Family/USC Architectural Guild Graduate Traveling
   Fellowship (2019) and William and Neoma Timme Travelling Fellowship
   (2019) provided funding for Yuliang Jiang's and Yihe Wang's field
   research, respectively. Funding for the printed and digital outputs came
   from the USC School of Architecture and the Richard T. Parker Grant
   (2020) to the Arid Lands Institute from the Wright-Ingraham Foundation.
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NR 48
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 2
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 14
AR 10966
DI 10.3390/su151410966
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA N7VU8
UT WOS:001039053200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Toimil, A
   Losada, IJ
   Alvarez-Cuesta, M
   Le Cozannet, G
AF Toimil, Alexandra
   Losada, Inigo J.
   Alvarez-Cuesta, Moises
   Le Cozannet, Goneri
TI Demonstrating the value of beaches for adaptation to future coastal
   flood risk
SO NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; DECISION-MAKING;
   IMPACT; NOURISHMENT; PROTECTION; BENEFITS; EROSION; MODEL
AB This paper presents a method for quantifying the benefits of beaches in reducing storm and long-term coastal flood risk. This method can contribute to cost-effective decision-making on climate change adaptation in many of the world's coasts.
   Cost-effective coastal flood adaptation requires a realistic valuation of losses, costs and benefits considering the uncertainty of future flood projections and limited resources for adaptation. Here we present an approach to quantify the flood protection benefits of beaches accounting for the dynamic interaction of storm erosion, long-term shoreline evolution and flooding. We apply the method in Narrabeen-Collaroy (Australia) considering uncertainty in different shared socioeconomic pathways, sea-level rise projections, and beach conditions. By 2100, results show that failing to consider erosion can underestimate flood damage by a factor of 2 and maintaining present-day beach width can avoid 785 million AUD worth assets from flood damage. By 2050, the flood protection and recreational benefits of holding the current mean shoreline could be more than 150 times the cost of nourishment. Our results give insight on the benefits of beaches for adaptation and can help accelerate financial instruments for restoration.
C1 [Toimil, Alexandra; Losada, Inigo J.; Alvarez-Cuesta, Moises] Univ Cantabria, IHCantabria Inst Hidraul Ambiental, Isabel Torres 15, Santander 39011, Spain.
   [Toimil, Alexandra; Le Cozannet, Goneri] French Geol Survey, Bur Rech Geol & Minieres BRGM, 3 Ave Claude Guillemin, F-45060 Orleans, France.
C3 Universidad de Cantabria; IHCantabria - Instituto de Hidraulica
   Ambiental de la Universidad de Cantabria; Bureau de Recherches
   Geologiques et Minieres (BRGM)
RP Toimil, A (corresponding author), Univ Cantabria, IHCantabria Inst Hidraul Ambiental, Isabel Torres 15, Santander 39011, Spain.; Toimil, A (corresponding author), French Geol Survey, Bur Rech Geol & Minieres BRGM, 3 Ave Claude Guillemin, F-45060 Orleans, France.
EM toimila@unican.es
RI Le Cozannet, Goneri/F-2005-2011; Toimil, Alexandra/AAS-9897-2020;
   Losada, Inigo/F-9001-2012; Lara, Javier/H-4703-2013
OI Le Cozannet, Goneri/0000-0003-2421-3003; Losada,
   Inigo/0000-0002-9651-9709; Alvarez-Cuesta, Moises/0000-0002-1180-0746;
   Lara, Javier/0000-0003-0968-1909; Toimil Silva,
   Alexandra/0000-0002-2067-872X
FU Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [101003598]; European Union;
   (Comunidad de Cantabria); Comunidad de Cantabria through the FENIX
   Project;  [RYC2021-030873-I];  [PID2021-126506OB-100]; 
   [MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/FEDER~UE];  [EU/PRTR-C17.I1]
FX A.T. acknowledges financial support from the Ministerio de Ciencia e
   Innovacion (MCIN/AEI and NextGenerationEU/PRTR) through the Ramon y
   Cajal Programme (RYC2021-030873-I). This research was also funded by the
   Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion through the grant COASTALfutures
   (PID2021-126506OB-100 with funding from
   MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/FEDER UE) and the ThinkInAzul Programme
   (with funding from European Union NextGenerationEU/PRTR-C17.I1 and the
   Comunidad de Cantabria) to A.T. and I.J.L.; the Comunidad de Cantabria
   through the FENIX Project to A.T.; and the European Union through the
   Horizon 2020 CoCliCo Project (grant agreement No 101003598) to A.T.,
   I.J.L. and G.L.
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TC 14
Z9 14
U1 4
U2 16
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
EI 2041-1723
J9 NAT COMMUN
JI Nat. Commun.
PD JUN 12
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 1
AR 3474
DI 10.1038/s41467-023-39168-z
PG 11
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA J2GU7
UT WOS:001007854800010
PM 37308502
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Keesstra, S
   Veraart, J
   Verhagen, J
   Visser, S
   Kragt, M
   Linderhof, V
   Appelman, W
   van den Berg, J
   Deolu-Ajayi, A
   Groot, A
AF Keesstra, Saskia
   Veraart, Jeroen
   Verhagen, Jan
   Visser, Saskia
   Kragt, Marit
   Linderhof, Vincent
   Appelman, Wilfred
   van den Berg, Jolanda
   Deolu-Ajayi, Ayodeji
   Groot, Annemarie
TI Nature-Based Solutions as Building Blocks for the Transition towards
   Sustainable Climate-Resilient Food Systems
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE food system transformation; climate change adaptation; ecosystem
   services; circular food systems
ID LAND-MANAGEMENT; WATER; SECURITY; OPPORTUNITIES; PERCEPTION; REMOVAL;
   SCIENCE; POLICY; CROPS
AB Food systems-encompassing food production, transportation, processing and consumption, including food losses and waste-are currently not delivering what is expected or needed to ensure their full contribution to societal well-being and ecological sustainability. In this paper, we hypothesize that nature-based solutions (NBS; solutions that are inspired by, supported by, or copied from nature) can overcome system challenges related to the functioning of the biosphere, society, or economy (including governance arrangements), and support a transition to sustainable climate-resilient food systems. We develop a conceptual framework to assess NBS contributions to such transitions. Three types of NBS are evaluated: intrinsic NBS which make use of existing ecosystems; hybrid NBS which manage and adapt ecosystems; and inspired NBS which consist of newly constructed ecosystems. We show that inspired NBS in particular will increase opportunities to achieve sustainable development in food systems. NBS can facilitate the much-needed transition to a different way of using our natural resources to reach the SDGs by 2030. We identify the knowledge gaps that impede the development of NBS to support a transition towards sustainable, climate-resilient food systems.
C1 [Keesstra, Saskia; Visser, Saskia] Wageningen Environm Res, Team Soil Water & Land Use, POB 47, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Keesstra, Saskia] Univ Granada, Fac Filosofia & Letras, Dept Anal Geog Reg & Geog Fis, Campus Univ Cartuja, Granada 18071, Spain.
   [Veraart, Jeroen; Groot, Annemarie] Wageningen Environm Res, Team Climate Resilience, POB 47, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Verhagen, Jan; Deolu-Ajayi, Ayodeji] Wageningen Plant Res, Agrosyst Business Unit, POB 16, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Visser, Saskia] Climate Kic Holding BV Plantage, Middenlaan 45, NL-1018 DC Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Kragt, Marit] Univ Western Australia, Ctr Agr Econ & Dev, UWA Sch Agr & Environm, Perth, WA 6009, Australia.
   [Linderhof, Vincent; van den Berg, Jolanda] Wageningen Econ Res, Green Econ & Land Use, Postbus 29703, NL-2502 LS The Hague, Netherlands.
   [Appelman, Wilfred] Wageningen Food & Biobased Res, Postbus 17, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; University of Granada; Wageningen
   University & Research; Wageningen University & Research; University of
   Western Australia; Wageningen University & Research; Wageningen
   University & Research
RP Keesstra, S (corresponding author), Wageningen Environm Res, Team Soil Water & Land Use, POB 47, NL-6700 AA Wageningen, Netherlands.; Keesstra, S (corresponding author), Univ Granada, Fac Filosofia & Letras, Dept Anal Geog Reg & Geog Fis, Campus Univ Cartuja, Granada 18071, Spain.
EM saskia.keesstra@wur.nl
RI keesstra, saskia/Z-5477-2019; Linderhof, Vincent/A-7695-2013; Kragt,
   Marit Ellen/D-3185-2011
OI Visser, Saskia/0000-0002-2654-3041; Linderhof,
   Vincent/0000-0001-5936-7198; Deolu-Ajayi, Ayodeji/0000-0001-5309-6884;
   Keesstra, Saskia/0000-0003-4129-9080; Veraart,
   Jeroen/0000-0001-6463-2056; Kragt, Marit Ellen/0000-0001-6847-4817
FU Wageningen University & Research 'Food Security and Valuing Water
   programme' [KB-35-007-002]; Wageningen University & Research Circular
   and Climate Neutral' programme' - Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature
   and Food Security [KB-34-007-010]
FX This paper is the output of a project of the Knowledge-based Programme
   of the Wageningen University called 'Nature-Based Solutions for Climate
   Resilient and Circular Food Systems'. The authors would like to
   acknowledge funding from the Wageningen University & Research 'Food
   Security and Valuing Water programme' (KB-35-007-002) and Circular and
   Climate Neutral' programme' (KB-34-007-010), which is supported by the
   Dutch Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Security.
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NR 90
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 3
U2 31
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 5
AR 4475
DI 10.3390/su15054475
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 9V2HW
UT WOS:000948220900001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Asare-Nuamah, P
   Dick-Sagoe, C
   Ayivor, R
AF Asare-Nuamah, Peter
   Dick-Sagoe, Christopher
   Ayivor, Raymond
TI Farmers' maladaptation: Eroding sustainable development, rebounding and
   shifting vulnerability in smallholder agriculture system
SO ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Subsistence agriculture; Climate change; Adaptation; Maladaptive
   outcomes; Vulnerability; Sustainable development
ID CLIMATE-SMART AGRICULTURE; ADAPTATION STRATEGIES; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY;
   COPING STRATEGIES; FOOD SECURITY; VARIABILITY; RAINFALL; DETERMINANTS;
   PERCEPTIONS; LESSONS
AB Adaptation has become crucial in developing economies due to climate change impact, especially on agriculture, which is the backbone of many economies and the main source of livelihoods and food security. Some adaptation strategies applied in the context of developing countries, however, produce maladaptive outcomes, which are usually ignored in the planning phase of adaptation policies and programmes. This mixed methods study therefore explores adaptation strategies and the associated maladaptation outcomes of smallholder farmers in rural Ghana. The study administered questionnaire survey to 378 farmers and 41 key informants were interviewed. The major adaptation strategies of farmers included crop and livelihood diversification, agrochemicals application, and reduction in the number and size of meals. However, farmers' adaptation strategies result in maladaptation outcomes through the release of greenhouse gases, environmental degradation, and contamination of water bodies as well as resource conflicts and increasing pressure on lands, among others, which affect their capacity to respond to future climate change. Adaptation policy makers and development practitioners should prioritize the minimization of maladaptation outcomes through intensive review and modification of programmes prior to their implementation and extensive education on best practices among smallholder farmers.
C1 [Asare-Nuamah, Peter] Univ Environm & Sustainable Dev, Somanya, Ghana.
   [Asare-Nuamah, Peter] Pan African Univ, Yaounde, Cameroon.
   [Dick-Sagoe, Christopher] Univ Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana.
   [Ayivor, Raymond] Univ Ghana, Accra, Ghana.
C3 University of Botswana; University of Ghana
RP Asare-Nuamah, P (corresponding author), Univ Environm & Sustainable Dev, Somanya, Ghana.
EM pasare-nuamah@uesd.edu.gh
RI Asare-Nuamah, Peter/ABH-9302-2020; Dick-Sagoe, Christopher/J-4673-2015
OI ASARE-NUAMAH, PETER/0000-0002-3122-909X; Dick-Sagoe,
   Christopher/0000-0001-5295-252X
FU African Union Commission through the Pan African University Scholarship
FX This study was supported by the African Union Commission through the Pan
   African University Scholarship awarded to the first author.
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NR 81
TC 24
Z9 25
U1 4
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2211-4645
EI 2211-4653
J9 ENVIRON DEV
JI Environ. Dev.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 40
AR 100680
DI 10.1016/j.envdev.2021.100680
EA NOV 2021
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XB6OZ
UT WOS:000721448000002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Verschuuren, J
AF Verschuuren, Jonathan
TI Towards an EU Regulatory Framework for Climate-Smart Agriculture: The
   Example of Soil Carbon Sequestration
SO TRANSNATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL LAW
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change mitigation; Climate change adaptation; Food security;
   Common Agricultural Policy; Emissions trading; European Union
AB This article assesses current and proposed European Union (EU) climate and environmental law, and the legal instruments associated with the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), to see whether soil carbon sequestration is sufficiently promoted as a promising example of climate-smart agriculture'. The assessment shows that current and proposed policies and instruments are inadequate to stimulate large-scale adoption of soil carbon projects across Europe. Given the identified structural flaws, it is likely that this is true for all climate-smart agricultural practices. An alternative approach needs to be developed. Under EU climate policy, agriculture should be included in the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS) by allowing regulated industries to buy offsets from the agricultural sector, following the examples set by Australia and others. The second element of a new approach is aimed at the CAP, which needs to be far more focused on the specific requirements of climate change mitigation and adaptation. Yet, such stronger focus does not take away the need to explore new income streams for farmers from offsets under the ETS, as the CAP will never have sufficient funds for the deep and full transition of Europe's agriculture sector that is needed.
C1 [Verschuuren, Jonathan] Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Law Sch, Tilburg, Netherlands.
C3 Tilburg University
RP Verschuuren, J (corresponding author), Tilburg Univ, Tilburg Law Sch, Tilburg, Netherlands.
EM J.M.Verschuuren@uvt.nl
OI Verschuuren, Jonathan/0000-0002-8922-1584
FU European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under
   the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant [655565]; Australian Centre for Climate
   and Environmental Law of the University of Sydney, NSW (Australia);
   Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [655565] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions
   (MSCA)
FX This article is based upon a paper accepted for presentation at the 3rd
   European Climate Change Adaptation Conference 'Our Climate Ready
   Future', Glasgow (United Kingdom), 5-9 June 2017. This project has
   received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and
   innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie Grant Agreement
   No. 655565. The author wishes to thank the Australian Centre for Climate
   and Environmental Law of the University of Sydney, NSW (Australia) for
   its support, and the three anonymous reviewers for their valuable
   suggestions.
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NR 49
TC 28
Z9 29
U1 1
U2 40
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 2047-1025
EI 2047-1033
J9 TRANSNATL ENVIRON LA
JI Transnatl. Environ. Law
PD JUL
PY 2018
VL 7
IS 2
BP 301
EP 322
DI 10.1017/S2047102517000395
PG 22
WC Environmental Studies; Law
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Government & Law
GA GM3YG
UT WOS:000438047900006
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kundzewicz, ZW
   Pinskwar, I
   Brakenridge, GR
AF Kundzewicz, Zbigniew W.
   Pinskwar, Iwona
   Brakenridge, G. Robert
TI Changes in river flood hazard in Europe: a review
SO HYDROLOGY RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT 29th Nordic Water Conference
CY AUG 08-10, 2016
CL Vytautas Magnus Univ, Kaunas, LITHUANIA
HO Vytautas Magnus Univ
DE change detection; Europe; flood hazard; observations; projections
ID PROJECTIONS; RISK
AB Despite costly flood risk reduction efforts, material damage and death toll caused by river floods continue to be high in Europe. In the present review paper, after outlining a process-based perspective, we examine observed and projected changes in flood hazard. Spatial and temporal variability of large floods is analyzed, based on a time series of flood information, collected by the Dartmouth Flood Observatory in 1985-2016. Model-based projections of future flood hazard are critically reviewed. It is difficult to disentangle the climatic change component from strong natural variability and direct human impacts. The climate change impact on flood hazard is complex and depends on the river flood generation mechanism. It has not been possible to detect ubiquitous changes in flood characteristics in observation records in Europe, so far. However, we found an increasing tendency in the number of floods with large magnitude and severity, even if year-to-year variability is strong. There is a considerable spread of river flood hazard projections in Europe among studies, carried out under different assumptions. Therefore, caution must be exerted by practitioners in charge of climate change adaptation, flood risk reduction, risk insurance, and water resources management when accommodating information on flood hazard projections, under considerable uncertainty.
C1 [Kundzewicz, Zbigniew W.; Pinskwar, Iwona] Polish Acad Sci, Inst Agr & Forest Environm, Poznan, Poland.
   [Brakenridge, G. Robert] Univ Colorado, Dartmouth Flood Observ, CSDMS, INSTAAR, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
C3 Polish Academy of Sciences; University of Colorado System; University of
   Colorado Boulder
RP Kundzewicz, ZW (corresponding author), Polish Acad Sci, Inst Agr & Forest Environm, Poznan, Poland.
EM kundzewicz@yahoo.com
RI Pińskwar, Iwona/AAM-8819-2020; Brakenridge, G./R-7646-2019
OI Kundzewicz, Zbigniew/0000-0002-3579-5072; Pinskwar,
   Iwona/0000-0001-6759-1595; BRAKENRIDGE, G./0000-0002-3217-4852
FU CHASE-PL (Climate change impact assessment for selected sectors in
   Poland) of the Polish-Norwegian Research Programme [Pol
   Nor/200799/90/2014]
FX Financial support of the project CHASE-PL (Climate change impact
   assessment for selected sectors in Poland) of the Polish-Norwegian
   Research Programme operated by the National Centre for Research and
   Development (NCBiR) of Poland under the Norwegian Financial Mechanism
   2009-2014 in the frame of Project Contract No. Pol Nor/200799/90/2014 is
   gratefully acknowledged. The first author acknowledges the invitation
   from organizers of the XXIX Nordic Hydrological Conference 'Role of
   Hydrology towards Water Resources Sustainability' in Kaunas (Lithuania),
   8-9 August 2016 to deliver an opening keynote lecture and to contribute
   to a special volume of Hydrology Research. The paper is based on the
   invited opening keynote lecture delivered by the first author at the
   Conference in Kaunas.
CR Alfieri L, 2015, HYDROL EARTH SYST SC, V19, P2247, DOI 10.5194/hess-19-2247-2015
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NR 26
TC 82
Z9 85
U1 5
U2 54
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 1998-9563
EI 2224-7955
J9 HYDROL RES
JI Hydrol. Res.
PD APR
PY 2018
VL 49
IS 2
BP 294
EP 302
DI 10.2166/nh.2017.016
PG 9
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Water Resources
GA HB6HT
UT WOS:000451169100002
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Draghici, CC
   Andronache, I
   Ahammer, H
   Peptenatu, D
   Pintilii, RD
   Ciobotaru, AM
   Simion, AG
   Dobrea, RC
   Diaconu, DC
   Visan, MC
   Papuc, RM
AF Draghici, Cristian Constantin
   Andronache, Ion
   Ahammer, Helmut
   Peptenatu, Daniel
   Pintilii, Radu-Daniel
   Ciobotaru, Ana-Maria
   Simion, Adrian Gabriel
   Dobrea, Razvan Catalin
   Diaconu, Daniel Constantin
   Visan, Mircea-Cristian
   Papuc, Razvan Mihail
TI Spatial evolution of forest areas in the northern Carpathian Mountains
   of Romania
SO ACTA MONTANISTICA SLOVACA
LA English
DT Article
DE deforested areas; forest fund; territorial management; fractal analysis;
   lacunarity
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-IMPACT ASSESSMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LAND-USE;
   FRACTAL ANALYSIS; DEFORESTATION; DRIVERS; LACUNARITY; EROSION; COUNTY;
   MODEL
AB In this study, we used fractal analysis to monitor the space-time evolution of forest areas. By this method, we observed the degree of fragmentation/compaction and heterogeneity/homogeneity of forested, deforested and reforested areas. Changes undergone by the forest areas were analysed for the Northern Carpathian Mountains of Romania, the mountainous area that suffered the most extensive transformations in this respect, in Romania. The database used satellite images 654178 Landsat 7 ETM + for the period 2000-2014. For the assessment of forest areas, the database provided by the Department of Geographical Sciences, Maryland University for the 2000-2014 period, was used. The Fractal Fragmentation Index (FFI), Fixed Grid 2D Lacunarity (Lambda(FG2DL)) and Tug-of-War lacunarity (Lambda(T-o-W)) were used to monitor the degree of fragmentation of forested areas, respectively, the degree of heterogeneity and dispersion of deforested surfaces. The highest average annual decrease of forested areas was recorded in 2007 and 2012 due to the growing number of legally and illegally exploited. The results confirm that fractal analysis can provide important information on the space-time patterns of deforestation and reforestation that shows a continuous reduction.
C1 [Draghici, Cristian Constantin; Andronache, Ion; Peptenatu, Daniel; Pintilii, Radu-Daniel; Ciobotaru, Ana-Maria; Simion, Adrian Gabriel; Diaconu, Daniel Constantin; Visan, Mircea-Cristian] Univ Bucharest, Res Ctr Integrated Anal & Terr Management, 4-12 Regina Elisabeta Ave, Bucharest 030018, Romania.
   [Ahammer, Helmut] Med Univ Graz, Ctr Physiol Med, Inst Biophys, Harrachgasse 21-4, A-8010 Graz, Austria.
   [Dobrea, Razvan Catalin] Bucharest Univ Econ Studies, Fac Management, 6 Piata Romana Sq, Bucharest 010374, Romania.
   [Papuc, Razvan Mihail] Univ Bucharest, Fac Adm & Business, 4-12 Regina Elisabeta Ave, Bucharest 030018, Romania.
C3 University of Bucharest; Medical University of Graz; Bucharest
   University of Economic Studies; University of Bucharest
RP Draghici, CC (corresponding author), Univ Bucharest, Res Ctr Integrated Anal & Terr Management, 4-12 Regina Elisabeta Ave, Bucharest 030018, Romania.
EM cristian.draghici@geo.unibuc.ro; andronacheion@email.su;
   helmut.ahammer@medunigraz.at; peptenatu@yahoo.fr; pinty_ro@yahoo.com;
   ciobotaruanamaria@inbox.lv; simion.adrian14@gmail.com;
   razvan.dobrea@man.ase.ro; ddcwater@yahoo.com;
   visanmirceacristian@gmail.com; razvanmihail.papuc@gmail.com
RI Peptenatu, Daniel/AFY-7834-2022; Diaconu, Daniel
   Constantin/ADK-8369-2022; Simion, Adrian/E-2311-2017; PINTILII,
   Radu-Daniel/F-3155-2012; Ana-Maria, Ciobotaru/E-2148-2017; Andronache,
   Ion/G-1720-2012; Razvan Catalin, Dobrea/T-3392-2017; Cristian,
   Draghici/Q-8857-2017
OI Ana-Maria, Ciobotaru/0000-0002-3018-3448; Andronache,
   Ion/0000-0001-7693-9098; Razvan Catalin, Dobrea/0000-0002-7183-5051;
   Peptenatu, Daniel/0000-0002-4473-8969; Cristian,
   Draghici/0000-0002-7194-600X
FU Romanian National Authority for Scientific Research and Innovation,
   CNCS-UEFISCDI [PN-II-RU-TE-2014-4-0835, 1365]
FX This work was supported by a grant of the Romanian National Authority
   for Scientific Research and Innovation, CNCS-UEFISCDI, project number
   PN-II-RU-TE-2014-4-0835 and project UB number 1365 "Spatial projection
   of economic pressure on forest ecosystems".
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NR 53
TC 24
Z9 24
U1 0
U2 20
PU BERG FAC TECHNICAL UNIV KOSICE
PI KOSICE
PA PARK KOMENSKEHO 19, KOSICE, 043 84, SLOVAKIA
SN 1335-1788
J9 ACTA MONTAN SLOVACA
JI Acta. Montan. Slovaca.
PY 2017
VL 22
IS 2
BP 95
EP 106
PG 12
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Mining & Mineral Processing
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Mining & Mineral Processing
GA FI8DJ
UT WOS:000412231000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mees, H
   Crabbé, A
   Driessen, PPJ
AF Mees, Hannelore
   Crabbe, Ann
   Driessen, Peter P. J.
TI Conditions for citizen co-production in a resilient, efficient and
   legitimate flood risk governance arrangement. A tentative framework
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Flood risk governance; citizen co-production; resilience; legitimacy;
   responsibility distribution
ID COMMUNITY RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT; PRIVATE; ADAPTATION; LESSONS;
   ENGAGEMENT; DEMOCRACY; RESPONSIBILITIES; MITIGATION; PROTECTION
AB Across Europe, there is an increasing trend towards citizen involvement in the implementation of flood risk governance. Policy-makers increasingly advocate co-produced flood risk governance (FRG), whereby citizens are actively engaged in the implementation of flood risk policy, for example, by taking property-level protection measures. In doing so, they aim to make FRG more resilient, efficient and legitimate [Mees, H., Crabbe, A., Alexander, M., Kaufmann, M., Bruzzone, L., Levy, L., & Lewandowski, J.(2016a). Coproducing flood risk management through citizen involvement: Insights from cross-country comparison in Europe. Ecology and Society, 21(3), 7.http://dx.doi.org/10.5751/ES-08500-210307]. Co-production, however, also raises important questions concerning these aims. In this paper, the opportunities and limitations of and barriers to citizen co-production in FRG in terms of resilience, efficiency and legitimacy are investigated by an extensive review of literature on citizen co-production in other public services and on individual and community-based climate change adaptation and FRG. Based on this, a tentative framework is developed on the required conditions to enable co-produced FRG, which benefits both the resilience, efficiency and legitimacy of FRG.
C1 [Mees, Hannelore] Univ Antwerp, Res Grp Environm & Soc, Sociol, Antwerp, Belgium.
   [Crabbe, Ann] Univ Antwerp, Res Grp Environm & Soc, Antwerp, Belgium.
   [Driessen, Peter P. J.] Univ Utrecht, Fac Geosci, Utrecht, Netherlands.
C3 University of Antwerp; University of Antwerp; Utrecht University
RP Mees, H (corresponding author), Univ Antwerp, Res Grp Environm & Soc, Sociol, Antwerp, Belgium.
EM hannelore.mees@uantwerpen.be
RI ; Driessen, Peter/M-6751-2013
OI Crabbe, Ann/0000-0001-5179-2544; Driessen, Peter/0000-0002-0724-6666
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NR 90
TC 20
Z9 22
U1 2
U2 47
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PY 2017
VL 19
IS 6
BP 827
EP 842
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2017.1299623
PG 16
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA FP5DO
UT WOS:000417640100018
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kendrovski, V
   Spasenovska, M
   Menne, B
AF Kendrovski, Vladimir
   Spasenovska, Margarita
   Menne, Bettina
TI The Public Health Impacts of Climate Change in the former Yugoslav
   Republic of Macedonia
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; public health; vulnerability; impact
   assessment; strategy
ID HEAT-WAVE; TEMPERATURE
AB Projected climatic changes for the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia for the period 2025-2100 will be most intense in the warmest period of the year with more frequent and more intense heat-waves, droughts and flood events compared with the period 1961-1990. The country has examined their vulnerabilities to climate change and many public health impacts have been projected. A variety of qualitative and quantitative methodologies were used in the assessment: literature reviews, interviews, focus groups, time series and regression analysis, damage and adaptation cost estimation, and scenario-based assessment. Policies and interventions to minimize the risks and development of long-term adaptation strategies have been explored. The generation of a robust evidence base and the development of stakeholder engagement have been used to support the development of an adaptation strategy and to promote adaptive capacity by improving the resilience of public health systems to climate change. Climate change adaptation has been established as a priority within existing national policy instruments. The lessons learnt from the process are applicable to countries considering how best to improve adaptive capacity and resilience of health systems to climate variability and its associated impacts.
C1 [Kendrovski, Vladimir; Menne, Bettina] WHO European Ctr Environm & Hlth, WHO Reg Off Europe, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Spasenovska, Margarita] WHO Country Off, WHO Reg Off Europe, Skopje 1000, Macedonia.
C3 World Health Organization
RP Kendrovski, V (corresponding author), WHO European Ctr Environm & Hlth, WHO Reg Off Europe, Pl Vereinten Nationen 1, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
EM kendrovskiv@who.int; msp@euro.who.int; menneb@ecehbonn.euro.who.int
RI Menne, Bettina/GQI-3567-2022
OI Kendrovski, Vladimir/0000-0002-8079-3391
FU German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and
   Nuclear Safety (BMU)
FX The seven-country initiative was funded by the then German Federal
   Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety
   (BMU) and coordinated by the WHO Regional Office for Europe. The
   Regional Office expresses its gratitude for the successful
   implementation of the project to the National Steering Committee of the
   former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, the members of which were
   nominated by the Ministry of Health.
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NR 33
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 21
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD JUN
PY 2014
VL 11
IS 6
BP 5975
EP 5988
DI 10.3390/ijerph110605975
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA AK8FL
UT WOS:000338662600026
PM 24905243
OA Green Published, gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Doorn, N
   Brackel, L
   Vermeulen, S
AF Doorn, Neelke
   Brackel, Lieke
   Vermeulen, Sara
TI Distributing Responsibilities for Climate Adaptation: Examples from the
   Water Domain
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; responsibility; citizens; community; social justice;
   capacity; blameworthiness
ID RAINWATER HARVESTING SYSTEMS; FLOOD RISK-MANAGEMENT; GREEN ROOFS;
   INSURANCE; JUSTICE; RESPONSES; BENEFITS; POLICY
AB It is often assumed that climate adaptation policy asks for new responsibility arrangements between central government and citizens, with citizens getting a more prominent role. This prompts the question under which conditions these new responsibility arrangements can be justified as they may raise serious ethical concerns. Without paying due attention to these ethical concerns, climate adaptation policy may be unsuccessful and even be considered illegitimate. This paper aims to address this topic by exploring some examples of climate adaptation responses and their associated ethical challenges. The examples from the water domain differ in terms of their primary beneficiaries and the extent to which they are prone to collective action problems. Discussion of the examples shows that any shift of responsibilities towards citizens should be accompanied by a governmental responsibility to make sure that citizens are indeed able to assume these responsibilities and a responsibility to see to it that the greater involvement of responsibilities does not create disproportional inequalities.
C1 [Doorn, Neelke; Brackel, Lieke; Vermeulen, Sara] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Technol Policy & Management, Dept Values Technol & Innovat, NL-2628 BX Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Delft University of Technology
RP Doorn, N (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol, Fac Technol Policy & Management, Dept Values Technol & Innovat, NL-2628 BX Delft, Netherlands.
EM N.Doorn@tudelft.nl; A.K.C.Brackel@tudelft.nl; S.Vermeulen@tudelft.nl
RI Vermeulen, Sara/GYI-9105-2022
OI Vermeulen, Sara/0000-0001-5248-0286; Brackel, Lieke/0000-0002-0353-1291;
   Doorn, Neelke/0000-0002-1090-579X
FU Dutch National Research Council NWO [Vidi.195.119]
FX This research was funded by the Dutch National Research Council NWO,
   grant number VI. Vidi.195.119.
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NR 89
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 9
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD APR
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 7
AR 3676
DI 10.3390/su13073676
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA RL3TS
UT WOS:000638900700001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Rouse, RE
   Libran, MDC
   Hernandez, E
   Cardona, L
AF Rouse, Robert. E.
   Libran, Maria Del Carmen
   Hernandez, Evelio
   Cardona, Lilliam
GP Florida State Horticultural Society
TI Low-chill peaches adapted to subtropical Florida and tropical Puerto
   Rico
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 119TH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE FLORIDA STATE
   HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
SE PROCEEDINGS OF THE FLORIDA STATE HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 119th Annual Meeting of the Florida-State-Horticultural-Society
CY JUN 04-06, 2006
CL Tampa, FL
SP Florida State Hort Soc
DE Prunus persica; Tranzschelia discolor; low-chill; deciduous fruit;
   chilling; climate adaptation; leaf rust; Diaprepes
AB Low-chill peach (Prunus persica L. Batsch) cultivars adapted for subtropical climates and tropical highlands have been developed by the University of Florida deciduous fruit breeding program. Cultivars requiring approximately 100 to 150 chill units have been evaluated in south Florida and Puerto Rico. Chilling has been accomplished in Florida by changing latitude and in Puerto Rico by changing altitude. Four cultivars (Flordaprince, TropicBeauty, Flordaglo, UFGold) have been evaluated in two localities of the central mountainous region of Puerto Rico. Parameters of tree growth, flowering time and formation, fruit development, and fruit quality have been evaluated. Preliminary results show trees fruit with commercial crops maturing in April and May with fruit 5 to 8 cm diameter weighing 80 to 130 gram during an optimum market window when there are no other peaches available. Three of the four low-chill peach cultivars are adapted to climatic conditions prevailing in the central mountainous region of Puerto Rico. The recommended cultivars are high quality and suitable for commercial, u-pick, and home planting.
C1 [Rouse, Robert. E.] Univ Florida, IFAS, SW Florida Res & Educ Ctr, 2686 State Rd 29 North, Immokalee, FL 34142 USA.
   [Libran, Maria Del Carmen; Hernandez, Evelio; Cardona, Lilliam] Univ Puerto Rico, Dept Hort, Mayaguez, PR 00681 USA.
C3 State University System of Florida; University of Florida; University of
   Puerto Rico; University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez
RP Rouse, RE (corresponding author), Univ Florida, IFAS, SW Florida Res & Educ Ctr, 2686 State Rd 29 North, Immokalee, FL 34142 USA.
EM rrouse@ufl.edu
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NR 24
TC 1
Z9 5
U1 0
U2 4
PU FLORIDA STATE HORTICULTURAL SOC
PI WINTER HAVEN
PA 800 LAKE JESSIE DRIVE, WINTER HAVEN, FL 33881 USA
SN 0886-7283
J9 PROC FL STATE HORTIC
JI Proc. Fla. State Horticult. Soc.
PY 2006
VL 119
BP 25
EP +
PG 2
WC Horticulture
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture
GA BGJ01
UT WOS:000247372700008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vögt, V
   Harrs, JA
   Reinhart, V
   Hollenbach, P
   Bühler, MM
   Tewes, T
AF Voegt, Verena
   Harrs, Jan-Albrecht
   Reinhart, Vanessa
   Hollenbach, Pia
   Buehler, Michael Max
   Tewes, Tim
TI Implementing Agile Data Workflows to Unlock Climate-Resilient Urban
   Planning
SO CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate resilience; climate policies and strategies;
   urban adaptation to global climate change; data analytics; agile
   administration; digital transformation
ID LOCAL-GOVERNMENT; ADAPTATION
AB Cities around the world are facing the implications of a changing climate as an increasingly pressing issue. The negative effects of climate change are already being felt today. Therefore, adaptation to these changes is a mission that every city must master. Leading practices worldwide demonstrate various urban efforts on climate change adaptation (CCA) which are already underway. Above all, the integration of climate data, remote sensing, and in situ data is key to a successful and measurable adaptation strategy. Furthermore, these data can act as a timely decision support tool for municipalities to develop an adaptation strategy, decide which actions to prioritize, and gain the necessary buy-in from local policymakers. The implementation of agile data workflows can facilitate the integration of climate data into climate-resilient urban planning. Due to local specificities, (supra)national, regional, and municipal policies and (by) laws, as well as geographic and related climatic differences worldwide, there is no single path to climate-resilient urban planning. Agile data workflows can support interdepartmental collaboration and, therefore, need to be integrated into existing management processes and government structures. Agile management, which has its origins in software development, can be a way to break down traditional management practices, such as static waterfall models and sluggish stage-gate processes, and enable an increased level of flexibility and agility required when urgent. This paper presents the findings of an empirical case study conducted in cooperation with the City of Constance in southern Germany, which is pursuing a transdisciplinary and trans-sectoral co-development approach to make management processes more agile in the context of climate change adaptation. The aim is to present a possible way of integrating climate data into CCA planning by changing the management approach and implementing a toolbox for low-threshold access to climate data. The city administration, in collaboration with the University of Applied Sciences Constance, the Climate Service Center Germany (GERICS), and the University of Stuttgart, developed a co-creative and participatory project, CoKLIMAx, with the objective of integrating climate data into administrative processes in the form of a toolbox. One key element of CoKLIMAx is the involvement of the population, the city administration, and political decision-makers through targeted communication and regular feedback loops among all involved departments and stakeholder groups. Based on the results of a survey of 72 administrative staff members and a literature review on agile management in municipalities and city administrations, recommendations on a workflow and communication structure for cross-departmental strategies for resilient urban planning in the City of Constance were developed.
C1 [Voegt, Verena; Hollenbach, Pia; Buehler, Michael Max] Konstanz Univ Appl Sci, Fac Civil Engn, D-78462 Constance, Germany.
   [Harrs, Jan-Albrecht; Reinhart, Vanessa] Helmholtz Zentrum Hereon, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, D-20095 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Tewes, Tim] City Constance, Dept Urban Planning & Environm, D-78462 Constance, Germany.
C3 HTWG Hochschule Konstanz University of Applied Sciences; Helmholtz
   Association; Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon
RP Vögt, V (corresponding author), Konstanz Univ Appl Sci, Fac Civil Engn, D-78462 Constance, Germany.
EM verena.voegt@htwg-konstanz.de; jan-albrecht.harrs@hereon.de;
   vanessa.reinhart@hereon.de; pia.hollenbach@htwg-konstanz.de;
   michael.buehler@htwg-konstanz.de; tim.tewes@konstanz.de
OI Vogt, Verena/0009-0002-6678-0671; Buhler, Michael
   Max/0000-0003-1478-6991; Hollenbach, Pia/0000-0002-1285-9272; Tewes,
   Tim/0009-0005-5056-8571; Reinhart, Vanessa/0000-0001-5742-7791
FU The co-authors particularly thank the City of Constance and all
   participating employees for their support and participation.
   Furthermore, we thank the citizens of the City of Constance for their
   continued reflections and feedback on the CoKLIMAx project an; Citizens'
   science workshop "Sensing City Konstanz"
FX The co-authors particularly thank the City of Constance and all
   participating employees for their support and participation.
   Furthermore, we thank the citizens of the City of Constance for their
   continued reflections and feedback on the CoKLIMAx project and all
   students for being essential partners in data collection through the
   Citizens' science workshop "Sensing City Konstanz".
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NR 67
TC 2
Z9 3
U1 3
U2 10
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2225-1154
J9 CLIMATE
JI Climate
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 11
IS 9
AR 174
DI 10.3390/cli11090174
PG 22
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA S9PV0
UT WOS:001074420900001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Eaton, MJ
   Terando, AJ
   Collazo, JA
AF Eaton, Mitchell J.
   Terando, Adam J.
   Collazo, Jaime A.
TI Applying portfolio theory to benefit endangered amphibians in coastal
   wetlands threatened by climate change, high uncertainty, and significant
   investment risk
SO FRONTIERS IN CONSERVATION SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE spatial conservation planning; reserve design; portfolio optimization;
   risk management; habitat-species modeling; climate change; assisted
   migration
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; LAND-DEVELOPMENT; PUERTO-RICO; SELECTION; AREAS
AB The challenge of selecting strategies to adapt to climate change is complicated by the presence of irreducible uncertainties regarding future conditions. Decisions regarding long-term investments in conservation actions contain significant risk of failure due to these inherent uncertainties. To address this challenge, decision makers need an arsenal of sophisticated but practical tools to help guide spatial conservation strategies. Theory asserts that managing risks can be achieved by diversifying an investment portfolio to include assets - such as stocks and bonds - that respond inversely to one another under a given set of conditions. We demonstrate an approach for formalizing the diversification of conservation assets (land parcels) and actions (restoration, species reintroductions) by using correlation structure to quantify the degree of risk for any proposed management investment. We illustrate a framework for identifying future habitat refugia by integrating species distribution modeling, scenarios of climate change and sea level rise, and impacts to critical habitat. Using the plains coqui (Eleutherodactylus juanariveroi), an endangered amphibian known from only three small wetland populations on Puerto Rico's coastal plains, we evaluate the distribution of potential refugia under two model parameterizations and four future sea-level rise scenarios. We then apply portfolio theory using two distinct objective functions and eight budget levels to inform investment strategies for mitigating risk and increasing species persistence probability. Models project scenario-specific declines in coastal freshwater wetlands from 2% to nearly 30% and concurrent expansions of transitional marsh and estuarine open water. Conditional on the scenario, island-wide species distribution is predicted to contract by 25% to 90%. Optimal portfolios under the first objective function - benefit maximization - emphasizes translocating frogs to existing protected areas rather than investing in the protection of new habitat. Alternatively, optimal strategies using the second objective function - a risk-benefit tradeoff framework - include significant investment to protect parcels for the purpose of reintroduction or establishing new populations. These findings suggest that leveraging existing protected areas for species persistence, while less costly, may contain excessive risk and could result in diminished conservation benefits. Although our modeling includes numerous assumptions and simplifications, we believe this framework provides useful inference for exploring resource dynamics and developing robust adaptation strategies using an approach that is generalizable to other conservation problems which are spatial or portfolio in nature and subject to unresolvable uncertainty.
C1 [Eaton, Mitchell J.; Terando, Adam J.] US Geol Survey, Southeast Climate Adaptat Sci Ctr, Raleigh, NC 27607 USA.
   [Eaton, Mitchell J.; Terando, Adam J.] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Appl Ecol, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
   [Collazo, Jaime A.] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Appl Ecol, North Carolina Cooperat Fish & Wildlife Res Unit, US Geol Survey, Raleigh, NC USA.
C3 United States Department of the Interior; United States Geological
   Survey; North Carolina State University; United States Department of the
   Interior; United States Geological Survey; North Carolina State
   University
RP Eaton, MJ (corresponding author), US Geol Survey, Southeast Climate Adaptat Sci Ctr, Raleigh, NC 27607 USA.; Eaton, MJ (corresponding author), North Carolina State Univ, Dept Appl Ecol, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
EM meaton@usgs.gov
RI Eaton, Mitch/HKW-4534-2023; Collazo, Jaime/R-8779-2019
OI Eaton, Mitchell/0000-0001-7324-6333; Collazo, Jaime/0000-0002-1816-7744
FU US Geological Survey - Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center
   [RWO-241]
FX We thank Curtis Belyea for assistance with manuscript figures. Julien
   Martin offered helpful revisions for an earlier draft. Neftali Rios
   Lopez has provided on-going discussion, advice, and insights on coqui
   llanero biology and conservation, for which we are grateful. Two
   reviewers offered helpful suggestions to improve this manuscript. The
   U.S. Geological Survey, Southeast Climate Adaptation Science Center has
   provided long-term funding, administrative, and staff support for
   amphibian conservation efforts in Puerto Rico. Any use of trade, firm,
   or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not imply
   endorsement by the U.S. Government.
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NR 60
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2673-611X
J9 FRONT CONSERV SCI
JI Front. Conserv. Sci.
PD OCT 7
PY 2024
VL 5
AR 1444626
DI 10.3389/fcosc.2024.1444626
PG 17
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA J4Y9E
UT WOS:001337147100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ma, XH
   Sun, GL
   Meng, YQ
   Li, J
   Wu, ZZ
   Ma, R
AF Ma, Xiuhua
   Sun, Guoliang
   Meng, Yuqiong
   Li, Jiao
   Wu, Zezhong
   Ma, Rui
TI Stress response and adaptation mechanism of triploid rainbow trout (<i>
   Oncorhynchus</i> mykiss ) treated with chronic heat challenge
SO AQUACULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Triploid rainbow trout; Chronic heat stress; Liver; Intestine; Gill
ID INTESTINAL MORPHOLOGY
AB The impacts of global warming are widespread and profound, prolonged temperature increases can pose a serious threat to various organisms. Knowing the process underlying fish tolerance to high water temperature can develop practical solutions for fish to adapt to climate change. As a typical cold-water cultured fish, rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) is an ideal model for studying thermal stress response strategies in cold-water fish in the context of global warming. In this study, we methodically inspected how extended high-water temperature affected the growth performance, feed utilization, blood biochemical indexes, morphological observation of liver, intestinal and gill tissues, as well as related enzyme activities and gene mRNA expression of triploid rainbow trout. Thus, two groups (three replicates) were designed: the chronic heat stress group (HG, 19.21 +/- 0.05 degrees C) and the control group (CG, 15.13 +/- 0.07 degrees C), each group contained 45 fish and feeding trial with 31 days. A decline in growth performance, including the final weight, weight gain rate, and feed intake, was observed in the HG during the current investigation. In response to prolonged heat stress, the level of plasma cortisol, aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase and heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) increased. Our results also showed there were fewer glycogen particles in the liver after chronic heat stress. Interestingly, an increase in the enzyme activity of glucose metabolism but not lipid metabolism was observed in the HG. Chronic heat stress caused the intestine's digestive enzyme activity (lipase, protease, and amylase) to decrease while goblet cell counts dramatically rose. Additionally, gill morphology underwent remodeling under chronic heat stress, including modification in the distance between interlamellar, secondary lamellar length and basal epithelial thickness. Meanwhile, higher levels of gene expression linked to autophagy and apoptosis were detected in gills. The above results indicate that under chronic heat stress, triploid rainbow trout responded to heat stress by accelerating hepatic glycogenolysis, resisting intestinal inflammation, and remodeling gill structure to ensure that the fish could survive for a long time. However, this acclimatization process leads to a decrease in intestinal digestibility, resulting in a decrease in the growth performance of triploid rainbow trout. In summary, the changes in growth performance, organ morphology, physiological, biochemical and metabolic changes reveal special heat stress adaptations in triploid rainbow trout under chronic heat stress.
C1 [Ma, Xiuhua; Sun, Guoliang; Li, Jiao; Wu, Zezhong; Ma, Rui] Qinghai Univ, State Key Lab Plateau Ecol & Agr, Xining 810016, Peoples R China.
   [Ma, Xiuhua; Sun, Guoliang; Meng, Yuqiong; Li, Jiao; Wu, Zezhong; Ma, Rui] Qinghai Univ, Coconstruct Minist & Prov, Minist Agr & Rural Affairs, Key Lab Plateau Cold Water Fish Culture & Ecoenvir, Xining 810016, Peoples R China.
   [Ma, Xiuhua; Meng, Yuqiong; Li, Jiao] Qinghai Univ, Coll Ecol Environm Engn, Xining 810016, Peoples R China.
C3 Qinghai University; Qinghai University; Ministry of Agriculture & Rural
   Affairs; Qinghai University
RP Ma, R (corresponding author), Qinghai Univ, State Key Lab Plateau Ecol & Agr, Xining 810016, Peoples R China.
EM myrui713@163.com
FU Open project of state key laboratory of plateau ecology and agriculture,
   Qinghai University [2023-ZZ-12]
FX This work was supported by the open project of state key laboratory of
   plateau ecology and agriculture, Qinghai University (2023-ZZ-12) . The
   authors gratefully thank Yang Liu, Lixia Chen, Xiaoyuan Qin for their
   support and help during this study.
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NR 47
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 21
U2 21
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0044-8486
EI 1873-5622
J9 AQUACULTURE
JI Aquaculture
PD DEC 15
PY 2024
VL 593
AR 741282
DI 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2024.741282
EA JUN 2024
PG 10
WC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA XM4A3
UT WOS:001262074700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ogunleye, A
   Akinloye, MO
   Kehinde, A
   Ajayi, OM
   Wongnaa, CA
AF Ogunleye, Ayodeji
   Akinloye, Mercy Olajumoke
   Kehinde, Ayodeji
   Ajayi, Oluseyi Moses
   Wongnaa, Camillus Abawiera
TI Impacts of credit constraints on adoption of risk management strategies
   and income of maize farmers in Northern Nigeria
SO AGRICULTURAL FINANCE REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE Adoption; Credit constraints; Income; Risk management strategies; Maize
   farmers; O13; Q14; G32
ID EMPIRICAL-EVIDENCE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; FORMAL CREDIT; PERCEPTIONS;
   INVESTMENT; ADAPTATION; SECURITY; MARKETS; ACCESS
AB PurposeA correlation has been shown in the literature between credit constraints and the adoption of agricultural technologies, technical efficiencies and measures for adapting to climate change. The relationship between credit constraints, risk management strategy adoption and income, however, is not well understood. Consequently, the purpose of this study was to investigate how credit constraints affect the income and risk management practices adopted by Northern Nigerian maize farmers.Design/methodology/approachCross-sectional data were collected from 300 maize farmers in Northern Nigeria using a multi-stage sampling technique. Descriptive statistics, seemingly unrelated regression and double hurdle regression models were the analysis methods.FindingsThe results showed that friends and relatives, banks, "Adashe", cooperatives and farmer groups were the main sources of credit in the study area. The findings also revealed that the sources of risk in the study area included production risk, economic risk, financial risk, institutional risk, technological risk and human risk. In addition, the risk management strategies used to mitigate observed risks were fertilizer application, insecticides, planting of disease-resistant varieties, use of herbicides, practising mixed cropping, modern planning, use of management tools as well as making bunds and channels. Furthermore, we found that interest rate, farm size, level of education, gender and marital status were significant determinants of statuses of credit constraints while the age of the farmer, gender, household size, primary occupation, access to extension services and income from maize production affected the choice and intensity of adoption of risk management strategies among the farmers.Research limitations/implicationsThe study concluded that credit constrained status condition of farmers negatively affected the adoption of some risk management strategies and maize farmers' income.Practical implicationsThe study concluded that credit constrained status condition of farmers negatively affected the adoption of some risk management strategies and maize farmers' income. It therefore recommends that financial service providers should be engaged to design financial products that are tailored to the needs of smallholder farmers in the study area.Originality/valueThis paper incorporates the role of constraints in influencing farmers' decisions to uptake credits and subsequently their adoption behaviours on risk management strategies. The researcher approached the topic with a state-of-the-art method which allows for obtaining more reliable results and hence more specific contributions to research and practice.
C1 [Ogunleye, Ayodeji; Akinloye, Mercy Olajumoke] Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Dept Agr Econ, Ife, Nigeria.
   [Ogunleye, Ayodeji] Univ Lincoln, Natl Ctr Food Mfg, Food Engn Dept, Lincoln, England.
   [Kehinde, Ayodeji] Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Ife, Nigeria.
   [Kehinde, Ayodeji] Univ Free State, Disaster Management Training & Educ Ctr Africa, Bloemfontein, South Africa.
   [Ajayi, Oluseyi Moses] Univ Lincoln, Brayford Campus, Lincoln, England.
   [Wongnaa, Camillus Abawiera] Kumasi Polytech, Dept Agr Econ Agribusiness & Extens, Kumasi, Ghana.
C3 Obafemi Awolowo University; University of Lincoln; Obafemi Awolowo
   University; University of the Free State; University of Lincoln
RP Ogunleye, A (corresponding author), Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Dept Agr Econ, Ife, Nigeria.; Ogunleye, A (corresponding author), Univ Lincoln, Natl Ctr Food Mfg, Food Engn Dept, Lincoln, England.
EM AOgunleye@lincoln.ac.uk
RI WONGNAA, CAMILLUS/M-5141-2019; Ajayi, Oluseyi Moses/I-5044-2013
OI Kehinde, Ayodeji/0000-0003-1931-6542; WONGNAA, CAMILLUS
   ABAWIERA/0000-0002-1310-551X; Ajayi, Oluseyi Moses/0000-0002-5774-9034
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NR 108
TC 0
Z9 0
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PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI Leeds
PA Floor 5, Northspring 21-23 Wellington Street, Leeds, W YORKSHIRE,
   ENGLAND
SN 0002-1466
EI 2041-6326
J9 AGRIC FINANCE REV
JI Agric. Finance Rev.
PD AUG 13
PY 2024
VL 84
IS 2/3
BP 114
EP 142
DI 10.1108/AFR-11-2023-0152
EA JUN 2024
PG 29
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Agriculture
GA D0X3Q
UT WOS:001237687300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Le, THL
   Kristiansen, P
   Vo, B
   Moss, J
   Welch, M
AF Le, Thi Ha Lien
   Kristiansen, Paul
   Vo, Brenda
   Moss, Jonathan
   Welch, Mitchell
TI Understanding factors influencing farmers' crop choice and agricultural
   transformation in the Upper Vietnamese Mekong Delta
SO AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Rice-based farming systems; Decision-making; Risk
   preference; Market access; Mechanisation
ID PLANNED BEHAVIOR; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SMALLHOLDER FARMERS;
   EMPIRICAL-ANALYSIS; DECISION-MAKING; ADAPTATION; DETERMINANTS;
   PERCEPTIONS; INTEGRATION; MANAGEMENT
AB CONTEXT: The Vietnamese Mekong Delta (VMD) is an Asian mega -delta which is vulnerable to climate change and sea level rise, and is undergoing demographic change. Farmers are encouraged to shift from rice monocultures to more diversified and flood -based cropping options to adapt to climate change, lessen negative environmental impacts and manage labour productivity. However, this transformation takes place slowly, especially in the flood -zone areas of the Upper VMD. There is currently limited understanding of farmers' complex decision -making that considers the dynamic interactions between farmers, socio-economic circumstances and biophysical environments in this sub -region. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to investigate the key factors driving farmers' decisions to switch between rice monocultures and other flood adaptive crops, and to provide lessons learnt and policy recommendations for sustainable and resilient agricultural transformation in the Upper VMD. METHODS: The study developed an agent -based model to simulate individual decision making in the Upper VMD. The model was parameterised with secondary data on social, policy, economic and biophysical drivers and validated by comparing the simulation results with real data in the baseline. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to gain insights into influencing factors. RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: The agent -based model shows that when farmers seek profit maximisation, the most influential determinants of their crop choice are high dyke construction, farmers' risk preference, perceptions of environmental sustainability, knowledge and market access of new alternatives, and labour availability. Considering the current context where the majority of farmers depend on high dykes, the transition away from rice monocultures and high dyke cropping systems, as envisaged by the Government, needs to occur gradually over an extended period and be contingent on a combination of measures that help implement existing policies at the local level. This includes discouraging high dyke construction; innovative extension services to raise farmer awareness of environmental sustainability and potential flood -adaptive cropping alternatives; targeted policies and actions for risk averse farmers; and market -based solutions to improve market access and mechanisation. SIGNIFICANCE: This study contributes to the current discourse on sustainable and resilient agricultural development in the VMD. The agent -based model provides insights into the farmers' crop choices in the flood zone and factors influencing their choices. These are important inputs for locally targeted policy planning and implementation.
C1 [Le, Thi Ha Lien; Kristiansen, Paul; Vo, Brenda; Moss, Jonathan; Welch, Mitchell] Univ New England, Fac Sci Agr Business & Law, Armidale, Australia.
   [Le, Thi Ha Lien] Inst Policy & Strategy Agr & Rural Dev, Hanoi, Vietnam.
C3 University of New England
RP Le, THL (corresponding author), Univ New England, Fac Sci Agr Business & Law, Armidale, Australia.
EM lien.le@cap.gov.vn; paul.kristiansen@une.edu.au; bvo3@une.edu.au;
   jonathan.moss@une.edu.au; mwelch8@une.edu.au
RI Le, Thì Ha Lien/JXM-1025-2024; Kristiansen, Paul/JDV-9957-2023
FU Institute of Policy and Strategy for Agriculture and Rural Development;
   Institute of Agriculture Market and Institution Research; Department of
   Agricultural and Rural development staff in An Giang province;
   University of New England
FX The authors wish to thank the Institute of Policy and Strategy for
   Agriculture and Rural Development; the Institute of Agriculture Market
   and Institution Research; the Department of Agricultural and Rural
   development staff in An Giang province, An Phu District and Phu Huu
   Commune for their efforts in providing secondary data, linking the
   research team members with farmers and experts in the study areas, and
   offering advice on the design of the ABM. Funding from the University of
   New England is gratefully acknowledged.
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PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0308-521X
EI 1873-2267
J9 AGR SYST
JI Agric. Syst.
PD APR
PY 2024
VL 216
AR 103899
DI 10.1016/j.agsy.2024.103899
EA FEB 2024
PG 14
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA MZ3E5
UT WOS:001197410000001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Klimenko, VV
   Fedotova, EV
AF Klimenko, V. V.
   Fedotova, E. V.
TI Long-Term Development Prospects of Russia's Wind Energy in the
   Conditions of Expected Climate Changes
SO THERMAL ENGINEERING
LA English
DT Article
DE wind power; climate change; wind speed; climate scenarios
AB The climatic effect on the operation of wind power plants in Russia is analyzed. Based on the global experience of wind farms' operation, a quantitative assessment of the sensitivity of electric power generation by modern wind turbines to wind speed variation is carried out. Using the ensemble approach, predictive estimates of changes in the wind fields in Russia are obtained for the 21st century using the results of general atmospheric circulation models participating in the international project CMIP5 (Coupled Multimodel Intercomparison Project Phase 5). The validity of the findings is ensured by the validation procedure, including a comparison of different versions of the multimodel ensemble with data reanalysis. The predictive estimate obtained for the climatic scenario developed at the National Research University Moscow Power Engineering Institute (NRU MPEI) is compared with generally accepted climatic scenarios based on the use of so-called greenhouse gas representative concentration pathways. It is shown that the choice of the scenario has a significant impact on the forecast results. However, the data of the calculations distinguish several features of the wind regime in the 21st century, which are almost independent of the selected scenario or ensemble composition and, apparently, can be considered reliable. In particular, it is found that there is a possibility of some decrease in average wind speeds across Russia during the 21st century. However, in Primorskiy Kray, the expected climate change will lead to the formation of a zone with a steady increase in its speed. Changes in the technical wind potential in the regions of the country where the construction of wind turbines is planned will amount to from -15 to -20% for the subarctic regions and from +5 to +10% for Primorskiy Kray by the end of the 21st century. It follows from the calculations that the currently observed climate warming, in all likelihood, does not pose a serious threat to the development of wind energy in Russia. The modern and planned location of wind farms even makes it possible to expect some growth in their production rate in the first half of the 21st century. At the same time, the prospect of long-term changes in the wind regime should certainly be taken into account when selecting the wind farm location and predesign analysis as part of the measures aimed at adapting to climate changes.
C1 [Klimenko, V. V.; Fedotova, E. V.] Natl Res Univ Moscow Power Engn Inst NRU MPEI, Moscow 111250, Russia.
C3 Moscow Power Engineering Institute
RP Klimenko, VV (corresponding author), Natl Res Univ Moscow Power Engn Inst NRU MPEI, Moscow 111250, Russia.
EM nilgpe@mpei.ru
RI Klimenko, Vladimir/O-3105-2013; Fedotova, Ekaterina/M-1730-2016
OI Fedotova, Ekaterina/0000-0002-5590-9591
FU Russian Science Foundation [18-79-10255]; Russian Science Foundation
   [18-79-10255] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation
FX This work was supported by the Russian Science Foundation (project no.
   18-79-10255).
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NR 52
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 2
PU PLEIADES PUBLISHING INC
PI NEW YORK
PA PLEIADES HOUSE, 7 W 54 ST, NEW YORK,  NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0040-6015
EI 1555-6301
J9 THERM ENG+
JI Therm. Eng.
PD JUN
PY 2020
VL 67
IS 6
BP 331
EP 342
DI 10.1134/S0040601520060051
PG 12
WC Thermodynamics; Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Mechanical
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Thermodynamics; Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA VK8BF
UT WOS:000755724300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Short, CA
   Renganathan, G
   Lomas, KJ
AF Short, C. Alan
   Renganathan, Giridharan
   Lomas, Kevin J.
TI A medium-rise 1970s maternity hospital in the east of England:
   Resilience and adaptation to climate change
SO BUILDING SERVICES ENGINEERING RESEARCH & TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Hospitals; resilience; adaptation; climate change; mixed mode
ID PERFORMANCE
AB The late 1970s design for the Rosie Maternity Hospital on the Addenbrookes campus in Cambridge is a recurring type across the UK National Health Service, a framed three-storey courtyard configuration in brick masonry. It was selected as a case study project for the Design and Delivery of Robust Hospitals in a Changing Climate' project, pursuing the methodology developed for that research. Temperature data were collected in representative spaces within the hospital, over a two-year period. These revealed overheating in mild conditions relative to an observed 24? threshold for sleep but concealed within the customary 28? threshold marking the upper limit of acceptable conditions. The building was modelled using current climate data to predict 2010 conditions. The model was then calibrated against the observed 2010 data and used to predict the likely internal temperatures in current and 2030s. The results indicated an increase in peak temperatures. Four adaptive intervention schemes were subsequently developed: an enlightened' industry standard Passivhaus'-type option providing superinsulation, sealed glazing and heat recovery; a lower technology-based scheme promoting natural cross-ventilation by providing greater opening glazing area, opening up the plan, sunshading and additional insulation; an enhanced natural ventilation scheme glazing over the courtyards to provide supply air winter gardens, and an advanced natural ventilation option pursuing passive downdraught cooling. All four schemes were modelled using the projected current and 2030s weather data and their performance was compared. The schemes were fully costed to yield relative value for money' guidance to National Health Service Trusts. Practical application: The Heat wave Plan for England 2014 warns National Health Service (NHS) organisations of the risks to patients, particularly the very young, the elderly and the seriously ill, from extreme summer heat events.(1) The Chief Medical Officer in her introduction challenges each NHS locality to plan well in advance of hot spells, as appropriate. This paper describes the likely extent of overheating risk and a series of potential adaptation plans for a recurring NHS hospital building type. As a consequence, estates and facilities decision makers in NHS organisations and Public Health England officers charged with the mitigation of risk resulting from overheating of wards and clinical spaces will benefit directly in their necessary decision making from the findings. Policy makers in the Department of Health and policy advisors in the NHS Sustainable Development Unit and the Climate Change Committee Adaptation Sub-Committee will benefit from the evidence presented in advising the NHS and Department of Health.
C1 [Short, C. Alan] Univ Cambridge, Dept Architecture, Cambridge CB2 1PX, England.
   [Renganathan, Giridharan] Univ Kent, Kent Sch Architecture, Canterbury, Kent, England.
   [Lomas, Kevin J.] Univ Loughborough, Loughborough, Leics, England.
C3 University of Cambridge; University of Kent; Loughborough University
RP Short, CA (corresponding author), Univ Cambridge, Dept Architecture, 1-5 Scroope Terrace,Trumpington St, Cambridge CB2 1PX, England.
EM cas64@cam.ac.uk
RI Renganathan, Giridharan/AAI-6213-2020
OI short, charles alan/0000-0001-5699-0259; Renganathan,
   Giridharan/0000-0002-8627-5616
FU UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council through the
   'Adaptation and Resilience to a Changing Climate' (ARCC) programme under
   the auspices of the 'Living with Environmental Change' (LWEC) initiative
   [EP/G061327/1]; Department of Health; EPSRC [EP/G061327/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX This work was undertaken at part of the UK Engineering and Physical
   Sciences Research Council project, 'Design and Delivery of Robust
   Hospital Environments in a Changing Climate' [grant number EP/G061327/1]
   through the 'Adaptation and Resilience to a Changing Climate' (ARCC)
   programme under the auspices of the 'Living with Environmental Change'
   (LWEC) initiative. The Project also received funding directly from the
   Department of Health.
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NR 17
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 4
U2 34
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0143-6244
EI 1477-0849
J9 BUILD SERV ENG RES T
JI Build Serv. Eng. Res. Technol.
PD MAR
PY 2015
VL 36
IS 2
SI SI
BP 247
EP 274
DI 10.1177/0143624414567544
PG 28
WC Construction & Building Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology
GA CB9VE
UT WOS:000349980700010
OA Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Birka, RJ
   Kum, JK
   Nnaji, CC
AF Birka, Rodrigue Jinyuy
   Kum, Jude Kawzu
   Nnaji, Chidozie Charles
TI Climate change adaptation through rainwater harvesting to enhance food
   security in Diamaré, Cameroon
SO JOURNAL OF WATER SANITATION AND HYGIENE FOR DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; food security; rainwater harvesting; rainfall
   variability
ID FAR NORTH REGION
AB Climate change and variability pose significant challenges in Cameroon's Far North Region. Relying predominantly on rainfed agriculture, this region faces heightened rainfall fluctuations and droughts, severely impacting agricultural output and pushing farmers into precarious socioeconomic conditions. Despite other adaptive strategies, access to water remains a challenge, prompting this study to assess the impact of rainwater harvesting (RWH)on crop yields in the Diamar & eacute; area. In a farm experiment, the growth of okra, cucumber, lettuce, and cowpea grown purely under rainfed conditions was compared to those that were rainfed as well as supplemented with harvested rainwater during the dry spell of the rainy season. A rooftop RWH system was adopted for irrigation, and data on crop growth and final yields were collected. Statistical analysis revealed a statistically insignificant yet positive influence of rainwater on the growth, development, and ultimate yield of okra, lettuce, and cucumber. The insignificant impact was due to minor differences in means of crop growth parameters. Despite minimal differences in means, the study underscores the positive impact of RWH on crop yields in Diamar & eacute;. The findings advocate for the adoption of rooftop and other cost-effective RWH techniques to enhance farmers' resilience and long-term economic benefits.
C1 [Birka, Rodrigue Jinyuy] Pan African Univ, Inst Water & Energy Including Climate Change, Tilimsen, Algeria.
   [Kum, Jude Kawzu] Minist Agr & Rural Dev, Yaounde, Cameroon.
   [Nnaji, Chidozie Charles] Univ Nigeria, Dept Civil Engn, Nsukka, Enugu State, Nigeria.
   [Nnaji, Chidozie Charles] Univ Ohannesburg, Fac Engn & Built Environm, Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Nigeria
RP Birka, RJ (corresponding author), Pan African Univ, Inst Water & Energy Including Climate Change, Tilimsen, Algeria.
EM birkarodrigue80@gmail.com
OI Birka, Rodrigue Jinyuy/0009-0000-5221-6223
FU African Union; Pan African University of Water and Energy Sciences,
   Including Climate Change (PAUWES); Global Water Partnership-Central
   Africa (GWP-CAf) Regional Secretariat
FX The authors wish to acknowledge support from the African Union and the
   Pan African University of Water and Energy Sciences, Including Climate
   Change (PAUWES) for awarding study scholarship to the primary author.
   The authors express profound gratitude to the Global Water
   Partnership-Central Africa (GWP-CAf) Regional Secretariat for their
   continuous support during the research project. Acknowledgment is also
   extended to Alliance Citoyenne pour le Developpement et l'Education a
   l'Environnement (ACEEN), for facilitating access to rural farmers and
   aiding in data collection in the Far North Region.
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NR 27
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2043-9083
EI 2408-9362
J9 J WATER SANIT HYG DE
JI J. Wate Sanit. Hyg. Dev.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 14
IS 12
BP 1244
EP 1259
DI 10.2166/washdev.2024.120
EA NOV 2024
PG 16
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA Q5P6O
UT WOS:001361082200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kumar, M
   Srivastava, S
   Tanwar, DV
AF Kumar, Mukesh
   Srivastava, Shristi
   Tanwar, Dig Vijay
TI Lie symmetries, soliton dynamics, conservation laws and stability
   analysis of Bogoyavlensky-Konoplechenko system
SO OPTICAL AND QUANTUM ELECTRONICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Bogoyavlensky-Konoplechenko system; Lie symmetry method; Soliton;
   Bifurcation theory; Conservation law
ID KONOPELCHENKO EQUATION; WAVE SOLUTIONS
AB Nonlinear waves are pivotal in analyzing the propagation of electromagnetic waves and the dynamics of oceanic systems. These waves are indispensable for modeling the long-term impacts of wave energy in coastal regions, addressing critical issues such as climate change adaptation, erosion and coastal flooding. The Bogoyavlensky-Konoplechenko system describes the interaction of the Riemann wave and the long wave propagating in two dimensions. The present work aims to elaborate symmetry reductions and derive invariant solutions of the proposed system. Meanwhile, the infinitesimal generators under one-parameter transformation are constructed, which render the system invariant. Therefore, a repeated process of reductions results in an equivalent system of ordinary differential equations and hence, leads to exact solutions. The solutions have rich physical significance and are efficient in defining several phenomena due to existing arbitrary functions and constants. To examine the physical nature of these solutions, numerical simulation is performed and thus, wave structures like bright and dark lumps, multisoliton, line multisoliton, periodic and annihilation profiles are analyzed. The bifurcation theory has been used to investigate the stability of dynamical system and examine corresponding phase portraits. Furthermore, the conserved vectors with underlying symmetries are constructed using Noether's theorem.
C1 [Kumar, Mukesh; Srivastava, Shristi] Motilal Nehru Natl Inst Technol Allahabad, Dept Math, Prayagraj 211004, India.
   [Tanwar, Dig Vijay] Graph Era, Dept Math, Dehra Dun 248002, India.
C3 National Institute of Technology (NIT System); Motilal Nehru National
   Institute of Technology; Graphic Era University
RP Tanwar, DV (corresponding author), Graph Era, Dept Math, Dehra Dun 248002, India.
EM mukesh@mnnit.ac.in; shristi.2020rma08@mnnit.ac.in;
   digvijaymaths@gmail.com
RI Srivastava, Shristi/KDN-9937-2024; Kumar, Mukesh/GNW-6756-2022
OI Srivastava, Shristi/0009-0006-1539-7655
CR Alizadeh F, 2023, OPT QUANT ELECTRON, V55, DOI 10.1007/s11082-023-05387-3
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NR 29
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 4
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0306-8919
EI 1572-817X
J9 OPT QUANT ELECTRON
JI Opt. Quantum Electron.
PD MAY 18
PY 2024
VL 56
IS 7
AR 1087
DI 10.1007/s11082-024-06990-8
PG 25
WC Engineering, Electrical & Electronic; Quantum Science & Technology;
   Optics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Physics; Optics
GA RK8E9
UT WOS:001227642700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vigna, I
   Bigi, V
   Pezzoli, A
   Besana, A
AF Vigna, Ingrid
   Bigi, Velia
   Pezzoli, Alessandro
   Besana, Angelo
TI Comparison and Bias-Correction of Satellite-Derived Precipitation
   Datasets at Local Level in Northern Kenya
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE dataset validation; precipitation; Kenya; local climate; ASALs; Quantile
   Mapping
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; PRODUCTS; ADJUSTMENT; DROUGHT; MODELS; REGION
AB Understanding ongoing trends at local level is fundamental in research on climate change. However, in the Global South it is hampered by a lack of data. The scarcity of land-based observed data can be overcome through satellite-derived datasets, although performance varies according to the region. The purpose of this study is to compute the normal monthly values of precipitation for the eight main inhabited areas of North Horr Sub-County, in northern Kenya. The official decadal precipitation dataset from the Kenyan Meteorological Department (KMD), the Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC) monthly dataset and the Climate Hazards Group Infrared Precipitation with Stations (CHIRPS) monthly dataset are compared with the historical observed data by means of the most common statistical indices. The GPCC showed the best fit for the study area. The Quantile Mapping correction is applied to combine the high resolution of the KMD dataset with the high performance of the GPCC set. A new and more reliable bias-corrected monthly precipitation time series for 1983-2014 results for each location. This dataset allows a detailed description of the precipitation distribution through the year, which can be applied in the climate change adaptation and tailored territorial planning.
C1 [Vigna, Ingrid; Bigi, Velia] Politecn Torino, Interuniv Dept Reg & Urban Studies & Planning DIS, I-10125 Turin, Italy.
   Univ Torino, I-10125 Turin, Italy.
C3 Polytechnic University of Turin; University of Turin
RP Vigna, I; Bigi, V (corresponding author), Politecn Torino, Interuniv Dept Reg & Urban Studies & Planning DIS, I-10125 Turin, Italy.
EM ingrid.vigna@polito.it; velia.bigi@polito.it;
   alessandro.pezzoli@polito.it; angelo.besana@unito.it
RI Vigna, Ingrid/LTE-7512-2024
OI Vigna, Ingrid/0000-0002-4530-7386
FU Italian Agency for Development Cooperation (AICS)
FX This study was conducted within the framework of the International
   Cooperation Project "ONE HEALTH: Multidisciplinary approach to promote
   the health and resilience of shepherds" communities in North Kenya"
   funded by the Italian Agency for Development Cooperation (AICS). The
   authors would like to thank the project coordinator (CCM) and project
   partners (TRIM and VSF-Germany) and the Kenyan Meteorological
   Department.
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NR 61
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 7
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 7
AR 2896
DI 10.3390/su12072896
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA LL4WR
UT WOS:000531558100321
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dittrich, R
   Ball, T
   Wreford, A
   Moran, D
   Spray, CJ
AF Dittrich, Ruth
   Ball, Tom
   Wreford, Anita
   Moran, Dominic
   Spray, Chris J.
TI A cost-benefit analysis of afforestation as a climate change adaptation
   measure to reduce flood risk
SO JOURNAL OF FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE afforestation; climate change; cost-benefit-analysis; natural flood risk
   management
ID FOREST; MANAGEMENT
AB Increased river flood frequency is considered a major risk under climate change. Protecting vulnerable communities is, therefore, a key public policy objective. Natural flood management measures (NFM)-notably re-afforestation on hillslope and floodplain-are increasingly discussed as cost-effective means for providing flood regulation, particularly when considering ecosystem services other than flood regulation. However, studies that place flood benefits alongside other benefits are rare, potentially causing uncertainty in policy decision-making. This paper provides a cost-benefit analysis of the impacts of afforestation on peak river flows under UKCP09 climate change projections, and on additional ecosystem services in a rural catchment in Scotland. We find significant positive net present values (NPV) for all alternatives considered. However, benefits are dominated by ecosystem services other than flood regulation, with values related to climate regulation, aesthetic appeal, recreation and water quality contributing to a high positive NPV. The investment in riparian woodland (under low and central climate change scenarios) delivers a positive NPV alone when considering flood regulation benefits only. The case study suggests that afforestation as a sole NFM measure provides a positive NPV only in some cases but highlights the importance of identifying and quantifying additional ecosystem co-benefits.
C1 [Dittrich, Ruth] Univ Portland, 5000 N Willamette Blvd, Portland, OR 97203 USA.
   [Ball, Tom] Univ Winchester, Dept Geog, Winchester, Hants, England.
   [Wreford, Anita] Lincoln Univ, Lincoln, New Zealand.
   [Moran, Dominic] Scodands Rural Coll, Edinburgh, Midlothian, Scotland.
   [Spray, Chris J.] Univ Dundee, Ctr Water Law Policy & Sci, Dundee, Scotland.
C3 University of Portland; University of Winchester; University of Dundee
RP Dittrich, R (corresponding author), Univ Portland, 5000 N Willamette Blvd, Portland, OR 97203 USA.
EM dittrich@up.edu
RI Wreford, Anita/Y-1996-2018
OI Spray, Chris/0000-0001-8622-335X
FU European Union [266018]; NERC [NE/R017522/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX European Union, Seventh Framework Programme, 2007-2013, Grant/Award
   Number: T266018
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NR 57
TC 29
Z9 30
U1 4
U2 100
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1753-318X
J9 J FLOOD RISK MANAG
JI J. Flood Risk Manag.
PD DEC
PY 2019
VL 12
IS 4
AR e12482
DI 10.1111/jfr3.12482
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA JM8ML
UT WOS:000496462100008
OA Green Submitted, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Montanari, B
   Bergh, SI
AF Montanari, Bernadette
   Bergh, Sylvia I.
TI Why women's traditional knowledge matters in the production processes of
   natural product development: The case of the Green Morocco Plan
SO WOMENS STUDIES INTERNATIONAL FORUM
LA English
DT Article
DE Cooperatives; Income generating activities; Green Morocco Plan; Rural
   poverty; Women's traditional knowledge; Morocco
ID HIGH ATLAS MOUNTAINS; ARGAN OIL; MANAGEMENT; COMMUNITY; CONTEXT
AB Traditional Knowledge (TK) is well recognized for its contribution to climate change adaptation strategies and community-based natural resource conservation. In Morocco, traditional knowledge is now increasingly incorporated into natural product development derived from natural resources as policies advocate the creation of income generating activities via cooperatives; these initiatives ultimately seek to empower rural women economically and to lift them out of poverty. Focus groups, semi-structured interviews and in depth observation were conducted in six cooperatives in Rhamna province to examine the extent to which women's traditional knowledge is applied and whether it is recognized. Our study reveals that the women's traditional knowledge is readily integrated in the development of natural products, vital in product development, yet is not officially acknowledged by the employers and national legislation. With international organisations increasingly putting pressure on countries such as Morocco to integrate the Access to Benefit Sharing (ABS) and particularly article 8j of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), the challenge lies now in securing recognition of women's traditional knowledge involved in these activities.
C1 [Montanari, Bernadette; Bergh, Sylvia I.] Erasmus Univ, Int Inst Social Studies ISS, Kortenaerkade 12, NL-2518 AX The Hague, Netherlands.
C3 Erasmus University Rotterdam; Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl
   Erasmus MC
RP Montanari, B (corresponding author), Erasmus Univ, Int Inst Social Studies ISS, Kortenaerkade 12, NL-2518 AX The Hague, Netherlands.
EM bernadettemontanari@hotmail.com; bergh@iss.nl
RI Montanari, Bernadette/AAE-9619-2020
OI Montanari, Bernadette/0000-0002-2124-7059; Bergh, Sylvia
   I./0000-0002-0651-6732
FU European Union Marie SklodowskaCurie Actions Individual Fellowships
   (IF); Project EWTEK [657223]; Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [657223]
   Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)
FX This work was supported by the European Union Marie SklodowskaCurie
   Actions Individual Fellowships (IF). Project EWTEK No 657223.
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NR 64
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 1
U2 15
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0277-5395
EI 1879-243X
J9 WOMEN STUD INT FORUM
JI Women Stud. Int. Forum
PD NOV-DEC
PY 2019
VL 77
AR 102275
DI 10.1016/j.wsif.2019.102275
PG 11
WC Women's Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Women's Studies
GA JU4NR
UT WOS:000501654800001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, JZ
   Li, LW
   Zhang, YN
   Liu, YF
   Ma, WL
   Zhang, ZM
AF Zhang, J. Z.
   Li, L. W.
   Zhang, Y. N.
   Liu, Y. F.
   Ma, W. L.
   Zhang, Z. M.
TI Using a fuzzy approach to assess adaptive capacity for urban water
   resources
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive capacity; Analytic hierarchy process; Climate change; Technique
   for order preference by similarity to an ideal solution; Triangular
   fuzzy number; Water resources
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT; AHP; VULNERABILITY; UNCERTAINTY;
   INDICATORS; FRAMEWORK; SYSTEM
AB Adaptive capacity has become the focus of current research on climate change. A complete set of methods to assess the adaptive capacity for Beijing water resources was established in this study. Risk factors for water resources were identified by overlapping climate change, urbanization issues, and urban water resources, and a three-dimensional framework comprising 12 indicators specific to each risk factor was built to assess the adaptive capacity of the water resource systems. These three dimensions represent the three pillars of a sustainable water resource system: water supply, water demand, and water quality. An analytic hierarchy process was used to determine the weight for each indicator. Then a fuzzy version of the technique for order preference by similarity to an ideal solution was applied to calculate the ranking for the 11 districts in Beijing and quantify the adaptive capacity for water resources in these areas. The fuzzy approach results revealed that three indicators are key: comprehensive management capabilities for water supply, control capability for water demand, and management capabilities for water quality. Finally, adaptability proposals are proposed in accordance with the ranking results obtained.
C1 [Zhang, J. Z.; Li, L. W.; Liu, Y. F.; Ma, W. L.; Zhang, Z. M.] Beijing Univ Civil Engn & Architecture, Beijing Climate Change Response Res & Educ Ctr, 1 Zhanlanguan Rd, Beijing 100044, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Y. N.] Res Inst Petr Explorat & Dev, 20 Xueyuan Rd, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Y. F.] China Acad Urban Planning & Design, 5 Chegongzhuang West Rd, Beijing 100044, Peoples R China.
C3 Beijing University of Civil Engineering & Architecture
RP Ma, WL (corresponding author), Beijing Univ Civil Engn & Architecture, Beijing Climate Change Response Res & Educ Ctr, 1 Zhanlanguan Rd, Beijing 100044, Peoples R China.
EM mawenlin@bucea.edu.cn
RI Li, Luwei/AAA-5118-2019
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [51408022]; Major Science
   and Technology Program for Water Pollution Control and Treatment
   [2015ZX07406001]; Beijing Municipal Excellent Talent Training Foundation
   [2013D005017000009]; Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation
   [8154044]
FX This work was financially supported by the National Natural Science
   Foundation of China (51408022), Major Science and Technology Program for
   Water Pollution Control and Treatment (No. 2015ZX07406001), Beijing
   Municipal Excellent Talent Training Foundation (No. 2013D005017000009)
   and Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation (No. 8154044).
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NR 39
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 16
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 1735-1472
EI 1735-2630
J9 INT J ENVIRON SCI TE
JI Int. J. Environ. Sci. Technol.
PD MAR
PY 2019
VL 16
IS 3
BP 1571
EP 1580
DI 10.1007/s13762-018-1777-9
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HO1UM
UT WOS:000460696700030
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Montgomery, SC
   Martin, RJ
   Guppy, C
   Wright, GC
   Tighe, MK
AF Montgomery, Stephanie C.
   Martin, Robert J.
   Guppy, Chris
   Wright, Graeme C.
   Tighe, Matthew K.
TI Farmer knowledge and perception of production constraints in Northwest
   Cambodia
SO JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Baseline survey; Production constraints; Farming practices; Upland
   cropping
AB Upland farming in Northwest Cambodia has developed rapidly over the last 20 years, with limitations to the plough based system now apparent, including soil degradation and reductions in yield and profitability. A survey was conducted in order to prioritise the main constraints to production, to aid in future research planning, and to identify potential beneficial modifications to the current system. Three hundred and ninety one farmers were interviewed regarding their current farming system constraints, knowledge of conservation agriculture and their future plans in the Districts of Samlout in Battambang Province and Sala Krau in Pailin Province. Perceived major problems in the farming system were extreme climate events such as droughts and heavy rain, declining crop yields, and cash flow shortages, particularly in the pre-monsoon period. This is a plough based farming system, yet 66% of farmers had heard of conservation agriculture, and 59% wanted to learn more about conservation agriculture practices. Two thirds of farmers were interested in how to grow crops in the post-monsoon dry season on residual soil moisture. The survey highlighted opportunities for farmer education and adoption of farming system modifications to improve productivity and sustainability of the farming system in Northwest Cambodia, and assist with climate change adaptation. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Montgomery, Stephanie C.; Martin, Robert J.; Guppy, Chris; Wright, Graeme C.; Tighe, Matthew K.] Univ New England, Sch Environm & Rural Sci, Agron & Soil Sci, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
C3 University of New England
RP Montgomery, SC (corresponding author), Univ New England, Sch Environm & Rural Sci, Agron & Soil Sci, Armidale, NSW 2351, Australia.
EM smontgom@myune.edu.au; rmarti27@une.edu.au; cguppy@une.edu.au;
   gwright@pca.com.au; mtighe2@une.cdu.au
RI Tighe, Matt/AAC-5369-2019; Guppy, Christopher/M-5837-2014
OI Guppy, Christopher/0000-0001-7274-607X; Tighe,
   Matthew/0000-0003-1027-0082
FU Higher Degree Research Services at the University of New England (UNE),
   Armidale; NSW Australia; Australian Centre for International
   Agricultural Research (ACIAR); ACIAR project [ASEM2010/049]
FX This research was jointly funded by Higher Degree Research Services at
   the University of New England (UNE), Armidale, NSW Australia and the
   Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR). It
   forms part of PhD studies for Stephanie Montgomery and is also embedded
   within the ACIAR project 'ASEM2010/049 Market focused integrated crop
   and livestock farming systems for north-west Cambodia' for which UNE is
   the commissioning organisation. The authors would like to thank the
   project team for their assistance with conducting the survey, especially
   Dr Van Touch and the staff from MJP agricultural department. The survey
   would not have been posssible without the 27 students from the
   University of Battambang, who in their third year of studying
   agricultural economics and rural development volunteered their time to
   assist as interviewers for the survey and to assist with data entry.
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NR 36
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 1
U2 15
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0743-0167
J9 J RURAL STUD
JI J. Rural Stud.
PD NOV
PY 2017
VL 56
BP 12
EP 20
DI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2017.09.003
PG 9
WC Geography; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Public Administration
GA FM3CZ
UT WOS:000414883200002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shan, YL
   Guan, DB
   Liu, JH
   Mi, ZF
   Liu, Z
   Liu, JR
   Schroeder, H
   Cai, BF
   Chen, Y
   Shao, S
   Zhang, Q
AF Shan, Yuli
   Guan, Dabo
   Liu, Jianghua
   Mi, Zhifu
   Liu, Zhu
   Liu, Jingru
   Schroeder, Heike
   Cai, Bofeng
   Chen, Yang
   Shao, Shuai
   Zhang, Qiang
TI Methodology and applications of city level CO<sub>2</sub> emission
   accounts in China
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE CO2 emissions inventory; Energy balance table; Chinese cities
ID GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; AIR-POLLUTANT EMISSIONS; FIRED POWER-PLANTS;
   CARBON EMISSIONS; CEMENT PRODUCTION; ENERGY USE; GHG EMISSIONS;
   UNCERTAINTIES; CITIES; URBANIZATION
AB China is the world's largest energy consumer and CO2 emitter. Cities contribute 85% of the total CO2 emissions in China and thus are considered as the key areas for implementing policies designed for climate change adaption and CO2 emission mitigation. However, the emission inventory construction of Chinese cities has not been well researched, mainly owing to the lack of systematic statistics and poor data quality. Focusing on this research gap, we developed a set of methods for constructing CO2 emissions inventories for Chinese cities based on energy balance table. The newly constructed emission inventory is compiled in terms of the definition provided by the IPCC territorial emission accounting approach and covers 47 socioeconomic sectors, 17 fossil fuels and 9 primary industry products, which is corresponding with the national and provincial inventory. In the study, we applied the methods to compile CO2 emissions inventories for 24 common Chinese cities and examined uncertainties of the inventories. Understanding the emissions sources in Chinese cities is the basis for many climate policy and goal research in the future. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
C1 [Shan, Yuli; Guan, Dabo; Mi, Zhifu; Liu, Zhu; Schroeder, Heike] Univ East Anglia, Sch Int Dev, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   [Liu, Jianghua; Chen, Yang; Shao, Shuai] Shanghai Univ Finance & Econ, Inst Finance & Econ Res, Sch Urban & Reg Sci, Shanghai 200433, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Zhu] CALTECH, Resnick Sustainabil Inst, Pasadena, CA 91106 USA.
   [Liu, Jingru] Chinese Acad Sci, Res Ctr Ecoenvironm Sci, State Key Lab Urban & Reg Ecol, Beijing 100085, Peoples R China.
   [Cai, Bofeng] Chinese Acad Environm Planning, Ctr Climate & Environm Policy, Beijing 100012, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Qiang] Tsinghua Univ, Dept Earth Syst Sci, Minist Educ, Key Lab Earth Syst Modelling, Beijing 100084, Peoples R China.
C3 University of East Anglia; Shanghai University of Finance & Economics;
   California Institute of Technology; Chinese Academy of Sciences;
   Research Center for Eco-Environmental Sciences (RCEES); Tsinghua
   University
RP Guan, DB (corresponding author), Univ East Anglia, Sch Int Dev, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.; Liu, JR (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Res Ctr Ecoenvironm Sci, State Key Lab Urban & Reg Ecol, Beijing 100085, Peoples R China.
EM dabo.guan@uea.ac.uk; liujingru@rcees.ac.cn
RI Zhang, Qiang/AGU-0618-2022; Mi, Zhifu/P-1027-2019; LIU,
   zhu/IYS-9390-2023; shao, shuai/T-5404-2019; Liu, Zhu/A-4634-2013; Shan,
   Yuli/N-7747-2015; Guan, Dabo/Y-2406-2019
OI Liu, Zhu/0000-0002-8968-7050; Shan, Yuli/0000-0002-5215-8657; Mi,
   Zhifu/0000-0001-8106-0694; Guan, Dabo/0000-0003-3773-3403; Shao,
   Shuai/0000-0002-9525-6310; Schroeder, Heike/0000-0003-2342-2030
FU National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFA0602604]; Natural Science
   Foundation of China [41629501, 71533005, 41328008, 71173209, 71503156,
   71373153, 71503168]; UK Economic and Social Research Council
   [ES/L016028/1]; Natural Environment Research Council [NE/N00714X/1];
   British Academy Grant [AF150310]; China's National Basic Research
   Program [2014CB441301]; State Key Laboratory of Urban and Regional
   Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences [SKLURE 2015-2-6]; UK Natural
   Environment Research Council [NE/N00714X]; National Social Science
   Foundation of China [15CJY058]; Shanghai Philosophy and Social Science
   Fund Project [2015EJB001, 2015BJB005]; Shanghai Municipal Education
   Commission [14SG32]; joint Leverhulme Trust; University of East Anglia;
   ESRC [ES/L016028/1] Funding Source: UKRI; NERC [NE/N00714X/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX This work was supported by the National Key R&D Program of China
   (2016YFA0602604), the Natural Science Foundation of China (41629501,
   71533005, 41328008, 71173209, 71503156, 71373153 and 71503168), the UK
   Economic and Social Research Council (ES/L016028/1) Natural Environment
   Research Council (NE/N00714X/1), British Academy Grant (AF150310),
   China's National Basic Research Program (2014CB441301), the State Key
   Laboratory of Urban and Regional Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
   (SKLURE 2015-2-6), the UK Natural Environment Research Council project
   (NE/N00714X), the National Social Science Foundation of China
   (15CJY058), Shanghai Philosophy and Social Science Fund Project
   (2015EJB001 and 2015BJB005) and "Shuguang Program" of Shanghai Municipal
   Education Commission (14SG32), the joint Leverhulme Trust and Social
   Sciences Faculty Postgraduate Studentships at the University of East
   Anglia.
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NR 89
TC 387
Z9 417
U1 61
U2 685
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD SEP 10
PY 2017
VL 161
BP 1215
EP 1225
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.06.075
PG 11
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA FD6RK
UT WOS:000407655400105
OA hybrid, Green Accepted, Green Published
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Howlett, M
   Ramesh, M
AF Howlett, Michael
   Ramesh, M.
TI Achilles' heels of governance: Critical capacity deficits and their role
   in governance failures
SO REGULATION & GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE governance; governance capacity; governance failure; policy capacity;
   policy failure
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; PUBLIC MANAGERS; POLICY CAPACITY; WELFARE
   SERVICES; GOVERNMENT; MODES; COPRODUCTION; PERSPECTIVE; MARKET; SHIFTS
AB This article assesses the usefulness of conceptions of policy capacity for understanding policy and governance outcomes. In order to shed light on this issue, it revisits the concept of governance, derives a model of basic governance types and discusses their capacity pre-requisites. A model of capacity is developed combining competences over three levels of activities with analysis of resource capabilities at each level. This analysis is then applied to the common modes of governance. While each mode requires all types of capacity if it is to match its theoretically optimal potential, most on-the-ground modes do not attain their highest potential. Moreover, each mode has a critical type of capacity which serves as its principle vulnerability; its Achilles' heel. Without high levels of the requisite capacity, the governance mode is unlikely to perform as expected. While some hybrid modes can serve to supplement or reinforce each other and bridge capacity gaps, other mixed forms may aggravate single mode issues. Switching between modes or adopting hybrid modes is, therefore, a non-trivial issue in which considerations of capacity issues in general and Achilles' heel capacities in particular should be a central concern.
C1 [Howlett, Michael] Simon Fraser Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
   [Howlett, Michael; Ramesh, M.] Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, Singapore, Singapore.
C3 Simon Fraser University; National University of Singapore
RP Howlett, M (corresponding author), Simon Fraser Univ, Dept Polit Sci, Burnaby, BC, Canada.; Howlett, M (corresponding author), Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, Singapore, Singapore.
EM howlett@sfu.ca
RI Howlett, Michael/W-7544-2019; Ramesh, M/D-4946-2009
OI Ramesh, M/0000-0002-7376-2300; Howlett, Michael/0000-0003-4689-740X
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NR 119
TC 104
Z9 112
U1 9
U2 27
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1748-5983
EI 1748-5991
J9 REGUL GOV
JI Regul. Gov.
PD DEC
PY 2016
VL 10
IS 4
BP 301
EP 313
DI 10.1111/rego.12091
PG 13
WC Law; Political Science; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law; Public Administration
GA EF9LC
UT WOS:000390650700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McPhearson, T
   Andersson, E
   Elmqvist, T
   Frantzeskaki, N
AF McPhearson, Timon
   Andersson, Erik
   Elmqvist, Thomas
   Frantzeskaki, Niki
TI Resilience of and through urban ecosystem services
SO ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Resilience; Urban ecosystem services; Urban planning; Governance;
   Sustainability
ID CITIES; BIODIVERSITY; OPPORTUNITIES; COMPLEXITY; DYNAMICS; METAPHOR;
   CYCLES
AB Cities and urban areas are critical components of global sustainability as loci of sustainability progress and drivers of global transformation, especially in terms of energy efficiency, climate change adaptation, and social innovation. However, urban ecosystems have not been incorporated adequately into urban governance and planning for resilience despite mounting evidence that urban resident health and wellbeing is closely tied to the quality, quantity, and diversity of urban ecosystem services. We suggest that urban ecosystem services provide key links for bridging planning, management and governance practices seeking transitions to more sustainable cities, and serve an important role in building resilience in urban systems. Emerging city goals for resilience should explicitly incorporate the value of urban ES in city planning and governance. We argue that cities need to prioritize safeguarding of a resilient supply of ecosystem services to ensure livable, sustainable cities, especially given the dynamic nature of urban systems continually responding to global environmental change. Building urban resilience of and through ecosystem services, both in research and in practice, will require dealing with the dynamic nature of urban social-ecological systems and incorporating multiple ways of knowing into governance approaches to resilience including from scientists, practitioners, designers and planners. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [McPhearson, Timon] New Sch Social Res, Tishman Environm & Design Ctr, New York, NY 10011 USA.
   [Andersson, Erik; Elmqvist, Thomas] Stockholm Univ, Stockholm Resilience Ctr, S-10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Frantzeskaki, Niki] Erasmus Univ, Dutch Res Inst Transit DRIFT, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
C3 The New School; Stockholm University; Erasmus University Rotterdam;
   Erasmus University Rotterdam - Excl Erasmus MC
RP McPhearson, T (corresponding author), New Sch Social Res, Tishman Environm & Design Ctr, New York, NY 10011 USA.
EM mcphearp@newschool.edu
RI Elmqvist, Thomas/AAY-6344-2021; Andersson, Erik/AAE-9771-2019;
   Frantzeskaki, Niki/AAN-1044-2021; McPhearson, Timon/JOZ-3799-2023
OI McPhearson, Timon/0000-0002-9499-0791; Elmqvist,
   Thomas/0000-0002-4617-6197; Andersson, Erik/0000-0003-2716-5502;
   Frantzeskaki, Niki/0000-0002-6983-448X
FU New School Tishman Environment and Design Center; ERA-Net BiodivERsA,
   URBES Project; national funders NOW
FX This research was funded by The New School Tishman Environment and
   Design Center and by ERA-Net BiodivERsA as part of the URBES Project
   with national funders NOW for Dr. Niki Frantzeskaki and FORMAS and SEPA
   for Dr. Erik Andersson and Dr. Thomas Elmqvist.
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NR 59
TC 283
Z9 315
U1 32
U2 398
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0416
J9 ECOSYST SERV
JI Ecosyst. Serv.
PD APR
PY 2015
VL 12
SI SI
BP 152
EP 156
DI 10.1016/j.ecoser.2014.07.012
PG 5
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CU6TA
UT WOS:000363665300016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Storbjörk, S
   Hjerpe, M
AF Storbjork, Sofie
   Hjerpe, Mattias
TI "Sometimes Climate Adaptation is Politically Correct": A Case Study of
   Planners and Politicians Negotiating Climate Adaptation in Waterfront
   Spatial Planning
SO EUROPEAN PLANNING STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
ID CITIES; POLICY; CHALLENGES; GOVERNANCE; BARRIERS; RISK
AB Today, spatial planning is expected to deliver climate adaptation and to manage, merge and balance various societal interests and priorities. To what extent proactive shaping of change is enabled by spatial planning practice is less explored. This paper illustrates how the ideals and ambitions of climate adaptation are manifested in waterfront spatial planning via a case study of Norrkoping, Sweden. Based on interviews with spatial planners and politicians responsible for strategic urban development planning, our study identifies a divergence in ambitions, approaches and positions. In local development plans, the position taken has less to do with climate risk severity than with an area's perceived political and economic attractiveness. When perceived attractiveness is low, precautionary climate adaptation serves as a pretext not to develop, whereas high perceived attractiveness leads to negotiated pragmatism allowing continued waterfront exploitation. We also identify a fragmentation in spatial planning, with weak interplay between municipal comprehensive planning and local development plans, resulting in ad hoc, case-by-case planning. Furthermore, different planning actors are organizationally compartmentalized, creating unfortunate intra-sectoral silos. We conclude that the integrative, proactive and reflexive potentials of spatial planning to deliver climate adaptation have yet to be realized.
C1 [Storbjork, Sofie; Hjerpe, Mattias] Linkoping Univ, Dept Water & Environm Studies DWES, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Storbjork, Sofie; Hjerpe, Mattias] Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res CSPR, Norrkoping, Sweden.
C3 Linkoping University; Linkoping University
RP Storbjörk, S (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Dept Water & Environm Studies DWES, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
EM sofie.storbjork@liu.se
OI Hjerpe, Mattias/0000-0002-5500-3300
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NR 60
TC 32
Z9 36
U1 0
U2 35
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0965-4313
EI 1469-5944
J9 EUR PLAN STUD
JI Eur. Plan. Stud.
PY 2014
VL 22
IS 11
BP 2268
EP 2286
DI 10.1080/09654313.2013.830697
PG 19
WC Environmental Studies; Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban
   Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Public Administration;
   Urban Studies
GA AP1RO
UT WOS:000341849000004
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ovenden, TS
   Jinks, RL
   Mason, WL
   Kerr, G
   Reynolds, C
AF Ovenden, Thomas S.
   Jinks, Richard L.
   Mason, William L.
   Kerr, Gary
   Reynolds, Chris
TI A comparison of the early growth and survival of lesser-known tree
   species for climate change adaptation in Britain
SO FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Species diversification; Silviculture; Climate Change Adaptation;
   Forestry; Productive forests; Resilience
ID DROUGHT; SPRUCE; DISTRIBUTIONS; MONOCULTURES; MIXTURES; SHIFTS
AB Globally, climate change is altering both seasonal climates and the occurrence of extreme climate events, resulting in a drive to ensure our forests are resilient to these changes and the challenges they will bring. In Great Britain (GB), there has been a reliance on a limited number of species grown in monospecific plantations and concerns over the resilience of these forests is leading to a growing recognition of the need to diversify tree species composition. However, evidence of the relative growth rate and survival of alternative tree species and provenances during the critical establishment phase (typically within five or six years of planting) is often limited, hampering consideration of the wider adoption of many potentially suitable species. To address this knowledge gap, we compared tree height and survival data six years after planting from 34 provenances across 18 tree species at five experimental sites established across GB in 2012 in monospecific plots. For coniferous species, we found that Larix decidua, Larix x marschlinsii and Pinus radiata (on drier sites) were consistently amongst the tallest species, but survival could be variable. Pseudotsuga menziesii and Pinus pinaster also showed good early growth, matching the growth rate of Picea sitchensis (the most widely planted conifer in GB) when cooccurring and often exhibited good survival. In contrast Picea orientalis was slow to establish and amongst the smallest species at all five sites after six years, with Cedrus atlantica also performing poorly where planted. Surprisingly, we found very few differences in both mean tree height and survival between most provenances of the same species across all experimental sites, though more obvious differences may emerge as these trees mature. Only a small number of broadleaf species were available for analysis at age six in this study, but as expected Betula pendula generally performed well, while Acer macrophyllum often had very high mortality. While there are concerns around the susceptibility of pine species to Dothistroma septosporum and the future use of larch species in GB forestry is currently limited by the disease Phytophthora ramorum, our results highlight the potential for these species to establish well and exhibit good initial growth and survival on drier sites, with the same true of P. menziesii on moister sites. Future work should aim to understand whether further differences between species and provenances emerge with age and explore the potential of these emerging species as components of mixed- species stands to increase GB forest resilience to climate change.
C1 [Ovenden, Thomas S.; Mason, William L.] Northern Res Stn, Forest Res, Midlothian EH259SY, Scotland.
   [Jinks, Richard L.; Kerr, Gary; Reynolds, Chris] Alice Holt Lodge, Forest Res, Farnham GU104LH, Surrey, England.
RP Ovenden, TS (corresponding author), Northern Res Stn, Forest Res, Midlothian EH259SY, Scotland.
EM Thomas.ovenden@forestresearch.gov.uk
FU Forestry England through a Service Level Agreement; INTER-REG iVB
   Atlantic
FX This work was funded by Forestry England through a Service Level
   Agreement, and this support is gratefully acknowledged. The
   estab-lishment of the REINFFORCE arboreta network was funded by
   INTER-REG iVB Atlantic area from 2009 to 2013 and maintained by the 11
   consortium members at their own expense under the coordination of IEFC.
   We are extremely grateful to the Forestry Commission of the UK for
   providing the sites upon which these experiments were established and
   the funding to conduct the analysis, to Forest Research's Technical
   Support Team (TSU) whole collected much of the data used in this study,
   Matt Parratt who was instrumental in establishing the experiments in GB
   and to all reviewers and colleagues who have helped improve this
   manuscript. The authors would like to dedicate this manuscript to Dr.
   Bill Mason, who sadly passed away during the final stages of its
   production.
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NR 68
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-1127
EI 1872-7042
J9 FOREST ECOL MANAG
JI For. Ecol. Manage.
PD NOV 15
PY 2024
VL 572
AR 122340
DI 10.1016/j.foreco.2024.122340
EA OCT 2024
PG 11
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA J9C5M
UT WOS:001339971100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Taylor, NG
   Häkkinen, H
   Butler, JRA
   Petrovan, SO
   Sutherland, WJ
   Pettorelli, N
AF Taylor, Nigel G.
   Hakkinen, Henry
   Butler, James R. A.
   Petrovan, Silviu O.
   Sutherland, William J.
   Pettorelli, Nathalie
TI Seabirds and climate change in North-West Europe: Identifying
   opportunities for an effective and efficient conservation response
SO CONSERVATION SCIENCE AND PRACTICE
LA English
DT Article
DE biodiversity; climate change adaptation; France; marine; North-East
   Atlantic; Norway; semi-structured interviews; social networks; United
   Kingdom
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION STRATEGIES; BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION; STAKEHOLDER
   ANALYSIS; MANAGEMENT; BARRIERS; INTERVIEWS; ENGAGEMENT; FRAMEWORK; RISK;
   FACE
AB Climate change poses a massive and growing threat to wildlife. Calls are growing for coordinated and collaborative responses to conserve species threatened by climate change, but how this works in practice remains largely unexplored. Focusing on seabirds in North-West Europe, we carried out 32 semi-structured stakeholder interviews to (1) explore existing conservation work linked to climate change, (2) identify barriers to work on climate change among conservation actors, and (3) identify key conservation actors and characterize their interactions. Interviewees identified a range of research, policy, and practical conservation work for seabirds related-directly or indirectly-to climate change. They highlighted the importance of general conservation work to facilitate seabird adaptation to climate change, and global mitigation of climate change (e.g., through decarbonization and ecosystem restoration). Interviewees identified several barriers to conservation work explicitly addressing climate change, pertaining to information, leadership, resources, and values/beliefs. We discovered that seabird conservation networks are generally well-established and harmonious, but not tension-free. There are also some misunderstandings over actor responsibilities that could lead to bystander effects. We present suggestions to increase the effectiveness and efficiency of seabird conservation in response to climate change.
   Le changement climatique constitue une menace massive et croissante pour la faune. Les appels se multiplient en faveur de r & eacute;ponses coordonn & eacute;es et collaboratives pour conserver les esp & egrave;ces menac & eacute;es par le changement climatique, mais la mani & egrave;re dont cela fonctionne dans la pratique reste largement inexplor & eacute;. En nous concentrant sur les oiseaux marins du nord-ouest de l'Europe, nous avons men & eacute; 32 entretiens semi-structur & eacute;s avec des parties prenantes pour (1) explorer les travaux de conservation existants li & eacute;s au changement climatique, (2) identifier les obstacles au travail sur le changement climatique parmi les acteurs de la conservation, et (3) identifier les acteurs cl & eacute;s de la conservation et caract & eacute;riser leurs interactions. Les personnes interrog & eacute;es ont identifi & eacute; une gamme de recherches, de politiques, et de travaux pratiques de conservation des oiseaux marins li & eacute;s - directement ou indirectement - au changement climatique. Ils ont soulign & eacute; l'importance du travail g & eacute;n & eacute;ral de conservation pour faciliter l'adaptation des oiseaux de mer au changement climatique et l'att & eacute;nuation mondiale du changement climatique (par exemple, par la d & eacute;carbonation, et la restauration des & eacute;cosyst & egrave;mes). Les personnes interrog & eacute;es ont identifi & eacute; plusieurs obstacles au travail de conservation abordant explicitement le changement climatique, concernant l'information, le leadership, les ressources, et les valeurs/croyances. Nous avons d & eacute;couvert que les r & eacute;seaux de conservation des oiseaux marins sont g & eacute;n & eacute;ralement bien & eacute;tablis et harmonieux, mais qu'ils ne sont pas exempts de tensions. Il existe & eacute;galement des malentendus sur les responsabilit & eacute;s des acteurs qui pourraient entra & icirc;ner des effets de spectateur. Nous pr & eacute;sentons des suggestions pour accro & icirc;tre l'efficacit & eacute; et l'efficience de la conservation des oiseaux marins en r & eacute;ponse au changement climatique.
   Klimaendringer utgj & oslash;r en massiv og & oslash;kende trussel mot dyrelivet. Det & oslash;ker krav om koordinerte og samarbeidende reaksjoner for & aring; bevare arter som er truet av klimaendringer, men hvordan dette fungerer i praksis er stort sett uutforsket. Med fokus p & aring; sj & oslash;fugler i Nordvest-Europa, gjennomf & oslash;rte vi 32 semistrukturerte interessentintervjuer for & aring; (1) utforske eksisterende bevaringsarbeid knyttet til klimaendringer, (2) identifisere barrierer for arbeid med klimaendringer blant bevaringsakt & oslash;rer, og (3) identifisere sentrale bevaringsakt & oslash;rer og karakterisere deres interaksjoner. Intervjuobjektene identifiserte en rekke forsknings-, policy-, og praktisk bevaringsarbeid for sj & oslash;fugler som er relatert - direkte eller indirekte - til klimaendringer. De fremhevet viktigheten av generelt bevaringsarbeid for & aring; lette sj & oslash;fugltilpasning til klimaendringer, og global demping av klimaendringer (f.eks. gjennom avkarbonisering, og restaurering av & oslash;kosystemer). Intervjuobjektene identifiserte flere barrierer for bevaringsarbeid som eksplisitt adresserer klimaendringer, knyttet til informasjon, ledelse, ressurser, og verdier/tro. Vi oppdaget at sj & oslash;fuglvernnettverk generelt er veletablerte og harmoniske, men ikke spenningsfrie. Det er ogs & aring; noen misforst & aring;elser om akt & oslash;ransvar som kan f & oslash;re til tilskuereffekter. Vi presenterer forslag for & aring; & oslash;ke effektiviteten og effektiviteten av sj & oslash;fuglvern som svar p & aring; klimaendringer.
   Climate change poses a massive and growing threat to wildlife. Understanding the human dimensions of conservation is critical to ensuring an effective and efficient response. Using semi-structured stakeholder interviews, we explored actions, attitudes, and actors related to seabird conservation and climate change in North-West Europe. We identified some challenges and barriers, but offer several suggestions for how to improve research, policy, and practice to support the seabird conservation response to climate change. image
C1 [Taylor, Nigel G.; Petrovan, Silviu O.; Sutherland, William J.] Univ Cambridge, Dept Zool, Conservat Sci Grp, David Attenborough Bldg,Pembroke St, Cambridge CB2 3QZ, England.
   [Hakkinen, Henry; Pettorelli, Nathalie] Zool Soc London, Inst Zool, London, England.
   [Butler, James R. A.] Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org CSIRO Land & Water, Brisbane, Australia.
   [Petrovan, Silviu O.; Sutherland, William J.] Univ Cambridge, St Catharines Coll, Biosecur Res Initiat St Catharines BioRISC, Cambridge, England.
   [Butler, James R. A.] Cawthron Inst, Nelson, New Zealand.
C3 University of Cambridge; Zoological Society of London; Commonwealth
   Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO); University of
   Cambridge; Cawthron Institute
RP Taylor, NG (corresponding author), Univ Cambridge, Dept Zool, Conservat Sci Grp, David Attenborough Bldg,Pembroke St, Cambridge CB2 3QZ, England.
EM ngltaylor@yahoo.com
RI Pettorelli, Nathalie/AAW-8438-2021; Sutherland, William/B-1291-2013;
   Taylor, Nigel/AFO-6772-2022
OI Hakkinen, Henry/0000-0003-1404-5798; Pettorelli,
   Nathalie/0000-0002-1594-6208; Sutherland, William/0000-0002-6498-0437;
   Taylor, Nigel/0000-0002-8643-826X
FU Stichting Ave Fenix Europa; Research England; Arcadia Fund; David and
   Claudia Harding Foundation
FX Stichting Ave Fenix Europa; Research England; Arcadia Fund; David and
   Claudia Harding Foundation; MAVA Foundation
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NR 75
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
EI 2578-4854
J9 CONSERV SCI PRACT
JI Conserv. Sci. Pract.
PD OCT
PY 2024
VL 6
IS 10
DI 10.1111/csp2.13219
EA SEP 2024
PG 18
WC Biodiversity Conservation
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation
GA I5A3Y
UT WOS:001302971500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Griese, KM
   Werner, K
   Dresing, M
AF Griese, Kai-Michael
   Werner, Kim
   Dresing, Merit
TI Dead or alive - climate adaptation phases in the event industry: a
   systematic literature review
SO JOURNAL OF POLICY RESEARCH IN TOURISM LEISURE AND EVENTS
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Events; climate adaptation phases; climate change; climate adaptation;
   resilience; threshold values
ID WEATHER; SPORT; IMPACT; CYCLE
AB The extent of climate change impacts has increased significantly in recent years. This can be seen, for example, in global warming, which is accelerating and intensifying the dynamics in the entire climate system. It is anticipated that these dynamics will also have an increasingly intensive influence on the event industry. However, existing approaches in the event literature only address these dynamics to a limited extent. This article, therefore, seeks to explore which climate adaptation stages or phases exist in the event context due to the accelerated climate change dynamics, as well as indicators used to inform decisions of event organisers, policymakers and other stakeholders in terms of possible adaptations and measures. Through a systematic literature review, five climate adaptation phases were identified, namely 'no adaptation', 'adaptation', 'postponement', 'cancellation' and 'substitution', leading to a process-oriented foundational understanding of climate adaptation for events. In addition, several influencing factors were derived which, depending on the mediator (e.g. risk-oriented vs. stakeholder-oriented), serve to justify decisions in each phase. This article proposes a theoretical framework for event organisers, assisting them in making vital decisions concerning the impacts of climate change while at the same time considering key influencing factors. In doing so, a systematic approach to addressing the increasing consequences of climate change for events is proposed.
C1 [Griese, Kai-Michael; Werner, Kim; Dresing, Merit] Univ Appl Sci, Hsch Osnabruck, Fac Business Management & Social Sci, Osnabruck, Germany.
RP Griese, KM (corresponding author), Univ Appl Sci, Hsch Osnabruck, Fac Business Management & Social Sci, Caprivistr 30a, D-49076 Osnabruck, Germany.
EM k-m.griese@hs-osnabrueck.de
RI Griese, Kai-Michael/JHU-6208-2023
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NR 84
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1940-7963
EI 1940-7971
J9 J POLICY RES TOUR LE
JI J. Policy Res. Tour. Leis. Events
PD 2024 DEC 21
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/19407963.2024.2443735
EA DEC 2024
PG 23
WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA Q0Z8L
UT WOS:001382083300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McLean, EH
   Prober, SM
   Stock, WD
   Steane, DA
   Potts, BM
   Vaillancourt, RE
   Byrne, M
AF McLean, Elizabeth H.
   Prober, Suzanne M.
   Stock, William D.
   Steane, Dorothy A.
   Potts, Brad M.
   Vaillancourt, Rene E.
   Byrne, Margaret
TI Plasticity of functional traits varies clinally along a rainfall
   gradient in <i>Eucalyptus tricarpa</i>
SO PLANT CELL AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE aridity; climate change; common garden; intra-species variation; leaf
   morphology; local adaptation; phenotypic plasticity;
   population-dependent plasticity
ID WATER-USE EFFICIENCY; BIRCH BETULA-PENDULA; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY;
   CLIMATE-CHANGE; GENOTYPIC VARIATION; DROUGHT RESPONSE; LEAF MORPHOLOGY;
   METROSIDEROS-POLYMORPHA; POPULATION DIFFERENCES; ASSISTED COLONIZATION
AB Widespread species often occur across a range of climatic conditions, through a combination of local genetic adaptations and phenotypic plasticity. Species with greater phenotypic plasticity are likely to be better positioned to cope with rapid anthropogenic climate changes, while those displaying strong local adaptations might benefit from translocations to assist the movement of adaptive genes as the climate changes. Eucalyptus tricarpa occurs across a climatic gradient in south-eastern Australia, a region of increasing aridity, and we hypothesized that this species would display local adaptation to climate. We measured morphological and physiological traits reflecting climate responses in nine provenances from sites of 460 to 1040mm annual rainfall, in their natural habitat and in common gardens near each end of the gradient. Local adaptation was evident in functional traits and differential growth rates in the common gardens. Some traits displayed complex combinations of plasticity and genetic divergence among provenances, including clinal variation in plasticity itself. Provenances from drier locations were more plastic in leaf thickness, whereas leaf size was more plastic in provenances from higher rainfall locations. Leaf density and stomatal physiology (as indicated by C-13 and O-18) were highly and uniformly plastic. In addition to variation in mean trait values, genetic variation in trait plasticity may play a role in climate adaptation.
   Our study investigates the nature of adaptation to climate in a widespread tree species, a topic of current and growing scientific interest, given the ongoing pressures of climate change. However, surprisingly few studies to date have examined within-species patterns of phenotypic plasticity and local adaptation in climate related traits, in any detail. Our study reveals clinal variation across a rainfall gradient, not only in the values of functional traits, but in the plasticity of several morphological traits. The findings support the hypothesis that the adaptive value of plasticity depends on both the environment and the trait in question, with genetic variation for plasticity itself forming part of local adaptations to climate.
C1 [McLean, Elizabeth H.; Byrne, Margaret] Div Sci, Dept Pk & Wildlife, Bentley, WA 6983, Australia.
   [McLean, Elizabeth H.; Prober, Suzanne M.] CSIRO Ecosyst Sci, Wembley, WA 6913, Australia.
   [Stock, William D.] Edith Cowan Univ, Sch Nat Sci, Ctr Ecosyst Management, Churchlands, WA 6018, Australia.
   [Steane, Dorothy A.; Potts, Brad M.; Vaillancourt, Rene E.] Univ Tasmania, Sch Plant Sci, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia.
   [Steane, Dorothy A.; Potts, Brad M.; Vaillancourt, Rene E.] Univ Tasmania, Natl Ctr Future Forest Ind, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia.
   [Steane, Dorothy A.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Fac Sci Hlth Educ & Engn, Sippy Downs, Qld, Australia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   Edith Cowan University; University of Tasmania; University of Tasmania;
   University of the Sunshine Coast
RP McLean, EH (corresponding author), Div Sci, Dept Pk & Wildlife, Bentley Delivery Ctr Locked Bag 104, Bentley, WA 6983, Australia.
EM liz.mclean@csiro.au
RI Steane, Dorothy/N-9940-2013; McLean, Elizabeth/H-7967-2013; Prober,
   Suzanne/G-6465-2010; Stock, William/B-8858-2008; Vaillancourt,
   Rene/J-7456-2014; Byrne, Margaret/H-8198-2015; Potts, Brad/C-6489-2013
OI Steane, Dorothy/0000-0002-8061-8454; McLean,
   Elizabeth/0000-0003-0998-2218; Prober, Suzanne/0000-0002-6518-239X;
   Stock, William/0000-0003-2475-2963; Vaillancourt,
   Rene/0000-0002-1159-9149; Byrne, Margaret/0000-0002-7197-5409; Potts,
   Brad/0000-0001-6244-289X
FU National Climate Change Adaptation Research Facility [TB11 03]
FX This work was funded by a grant from the National Climate Change
   Adaptation Research Facility (TB11 03). We thank David Bush (CSIRO) for
   information on the field trials and assistance with access, Martyn
   Lavery (Arianda Seed) for advice and sample collection in the natural
   forests, Shane Lavell and Paul Turnbull (DSE Victoria) for access to the
   trials and assistance with sampling, Craig Macfarlane (CSIRO) for advice
   and assistance with leaf measurements, and Gay Blake (DPaW WA) and
   Didier Alanoix (CSIRO) for field and laboratory work. We thank the end
   user advisory group for the project, David Freudenberger (Greening
   Australia), Gary Howling (Environment and Heritage NSW), Neil Riches
   (NRMWA) and Richard Mazanec (DPaWWA), for their advice and insight. The
   study would not have been possible without the field trials, designed
   and established by Tom Baker (University of Melbourne) and Des Stackpole
   (University of Tasmania) with the Australian Low Rainfall Tree Group. We
   also thank two anonymous reviewers for their useful comments on an
   earlier version of the manuscript.
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NR 90
TC 100
Z9 115
U1 9
U2 186
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0140-7791
EI 1365-3040
J9 PLANT CELL ENVIRON
JI Plant Cell Environ.
PD JUN
PY 2014
VL 37
IS 6
BP 1440
EP 1451
DI 10.1111/pce.12251
PG 12
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA AG5HV
UT WOS:000335451000016
PM 24329726
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, CW
   Gao, JB
   Liu, LL
   Wu, SH
AF Zhang, Chuanwei
   Gao, Jiangbo
   Liu, Lulu
   Wu, Shaohong
TI Simulating the effects of optimizing sowing date and variety shift on
   maize production at finer scale in northeast China under future climate
SO JOURNAL OF THE SCIENCE OF FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE optimizing sowing date; variety shift; APSIM; northeast China; climate
   change
ID CULTIVAR SELECTION; CROP MODELS; YIELD; IMPACTS; PHENOLOGY; ADAPTATION;
   MANAGEMENT; GROWTH
AB BACKGROUNDGlobal warming and the rising occurrences of climate extremes have become formidable challenges for maize production in northeast China. The optimization of sowing date and variety choice stand out as two economic approaches for maize to enhance its resilience to climate change. Nevertheless, assessment of the potential of optimizing sowing date and variety shift on maize yield at finer scale remains underexamined. This study investigated the implications of optimizing sowing date and implementing variety shift on maize yield from a regional perspective.RESULTSCompared to the reference period (1986-2005), climate change would decrease by 11.5-34.6% (the range describes the differences among climate scenarios and agro-ecological regions) maize yield in the 2050s (2040-2059) if no adaption measure were to be implemented. The combined adaption (optimizing sowing date and variety shift) can improve maize yield by 38.8 +/- 11.3%, 42.7 +/- 9.7% and 33.9 +/- 7.6% under the SSP1-2.6, SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 scenarios, respectively. The current sowing window typically falls within the projected optimal sowing window, defined as the period capable of achieving 90% of the maximum yield within the potential sowing window under future climate conditions. Consequently, the potential of the effect of optimizing sowing window on maize yield is limited. In contrast, variety shift results in higher yield improvement, as temperature rise creates favorable conditions for transplanting varieties with an extended growth period, particularly in high latitudes and mountainous regions. Under future climate, cumulative precipitation and compound drought and hot days during maize growing seasons are two key factors influencing maize production.CONCLUSIONSThe optimization of sowing date and variety choice can improve maize yield in northeast China. In addition, maize production should consider varieties with longer growth period and drought and heat tolerance to adapt to climate change. (c) 2023 Society of Chemical Industry.
C1 [Zhang, Chuanwei; Gao, Jiangbo; Liu, Lulu; Wu, Shaohong] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Chuanwei; Gao, Jiangbo; Wu, Shaohong] Univ Chinese Acad Sci Resources & Environm, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS
RP Gao, JB (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM gaojiangbo@igsnrr.ac.cn
RI Liu, Lulu/GXZ-9653-2022
OI chuanwei, zhang/0000-0003-0311-6191; Zhang, Chuanwei/0009-0001-6374-5515
FU the Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of
   Sciences [XDA28130104]; Strategic Priority Research Program of the
   Chinese Academy of Sciences
FX This work was financially supported by the Strategic Priority Research
   Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (grant no. XDA28130104).
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NR 56
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 24
U2 64
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0022-5142
EI 1097-0010
J9 J SCI FOOD AGR
JI J. Sci. Food Agric.
PD APR
PY 2024
VL 104
IS 6
BP 3637
EP 3647
DI 10.1002/jsfa.13247
EA JAN 2024
PG 11
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Chemistry, Applied; Food Science &
   Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Chemistry; Food Science & Technology
GA LN2N8
UT WOS:001141925800001
PM 38151478
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sardar, H
   Akhter, G
   Ge, YG
   Haider, SA
AF Sardar, Hassan
   Akhter, Gulraiz
   Ge, Yonggang
   Haider, Syed Ammar
TI Delineation of potential managed aquifer recharge sites of Kuchlak
   sub-basin, Balochistan, using remote sensing and GIS
SO FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE managed aquifer recharge; remote sensing; GIS; land use; slope; drainage
   density
ID GROUNDWATER RECHARGE; FREQUENCY RATIO; TAMIL-NADU; REGION; ZONES;
   DISTRICT; AREA; IMPLEMENTATION; INVENTORY; WEIGHTS
AB In the Kuchlak Sub-Basin (Pakistan), groundwater is overexploited, resulting in growing stress on groundwater resources. The water table level has declined rapidly due to intensive pumping. Artificial recharge methods and good management strategies are vital for the sustainable production of groundwater resources. Managed aquifer recharge is an artificial way of recharging the subsurface aquifers using surplus surface water, treated wastewater, and stormwater. It is a potential strategy for increasing freshwater supply and adapting to climate change. The present study proposes a method to delineate potential zones for MAR suitability in the Kuchlak Sub-Basin. INOWAS, a web-based tool, is utilized for narrowing down the available MAR techniques based on the hydrogeologic parameter and objectives of the study area. A geographic information system (GIS) coupled with the multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA), commonly known as GIS-MCDA, is used to develop the MAR suitability map. Six criterion maps, including geology, land use, slope analysis, drainage density, soil, and rainfall, were created in ArcGIS for suitability mapping. The criterion maps are ranked and weighted based on their relative contribution to the groundwater recharge and published literature using the Multi Influence Factor (MIF) method. The final suitability map was developed by overlaying all the criterion maps using a weighted linear combination (WLC) technique. The MAR suitability map was divided into five zones, namely, very high, high, moderate, very low, and low. The unsuitable zones reflect the urban and slope constraints that reduce surface infiltration. The suitability map reveals that 45% of the Kuchlak Sub-Basin exists in a very high-high suitability zone, 33% in moderate, and 17% in a very low-low suitability zone, while 5% of the study area was unsuitable due to the urban and slope constraints. The MAR suitability map developed in this study can serve as a basis for conducting a focused analysis of MAR implementation. Furthermore, the technique and results of this study may aid in mapping MAR suitability in any arid or semi-arid region.
C1 [Sardar, Hassan; Akhter, Gulraiz] Quaid i Azam Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Akhter, Gulraiz] CAS HEC, China Pakistan Joint Res Ctr Earth Sci, Islamabad, Pakistan.
   [Ge, Yonggang] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Mt Hazards & Environm, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
   [Ge, Yonggang] Chinese Acad Sci, Key Lab Mt Hazards & Earth Surface Proc, Chengdu, Peoples R China.
   [Haider, Syed Ammar] Eotvos Lorand Univ, Dept Phys & Appl Geol, Budapest, Hungary.
C3 Quaid I Azam University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of
   Mountain Hazards & Environment, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Eotvos
   Lorand University
RP Akhter, G (corresponding author), Quaid i Azam Univ, Dept Earth Sci, Islamabad, Pakistan.; Akhter, G (corresponding author), CAS HEC, China Pakistan Joint Res Ctr Earth Sci, Islamabad, Pakistan.
EM agulraiz@qau.edu.pk
FU International Science & Technology Cooperation Program of China; Chinese
   Academy of Sciences President's International Fellowship Initiative
   [2018YFE0100100];  [2021VCA0010]
FX This research is financially supported by the International Science &
   Technology Cooperation Program of China (2018YFE0100100) and the Chinese
   Academy of Sciences President's International Fellowship Initiative
   (Grant No. 2021VCA0010).
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NR 52
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 3
U2 9
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-665X
J9 FRONT ENV SCI-SWITZ
JI Front. Environ. Sci.
PD NOV 22
PY 2022
VL 10
AR 916504
DI 10.3389/fenvs.2022.916504
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6U6DR
UT WOS:000894455600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Xu, WX
   Chen, J
   Su, TH
   Kim, JS
   Gu, L
   Lee, JH
AF Xu, Wenxin
   Chen, Jie
   Su, Tianhua
   Kim, Jong-Suk
   Gu, Lei
   Lee, Joo-Heon
TI Cascading Model-Based Framework for the Sustainability Assessment of a
   Multipurpose Reservoir in a Changing Climate
SO JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Multipurpose reservoir; Global climate models (GCMs);
   Hydrological models; Data envelopment analysis (DEA); Sustainability
ID DATA ENVELOPMENT ANALYSIS; CHANGE IMPACTS; WATER-RESOURCES; PERFORMANCE;
   HYDROLOGY; ENSEMBLE; UNCERTAINTY; EFFICIENCY; SENSITIVITY; GENERATION
AB Climate change impacts on hydrological processes can affect reservoir operational performance. Hence, the reservoir operation model, based on historical climate conditions, may not guarantee sustainable water resources management in the future. To enable stakeholders to design reliable adaptation strategies, this study aims to propose a cascading framework to quantify the impacts of climate change on the operational performance and sustainability of a multipurpose reservoir. The Danjiangkou Reservoir (DJKR), which serves as the water source for the middle route of the South-to-North Water Diversion Project in China, was selected as a case study. To achieve the aforementioned aims, bias-corrected simulations from 13 global climate models (GCMs) were first input into five hydrological models [i.e., one data-driven [deep belief network (DBN)], three conceptual [SIMHYD, HBV, and Xin'anjiang (XAJ)], and one physically-based [variable infiltration capacity (VIC)]. The simulated reservoir inflows were then fed into a 10-day reservoir simulation model where DJKR operation followed the designed operating rules to evaluate reservoir operational performance. Finally, a data envelopment analysis (DEA) model was proposed to assess reservoir sustainability under both historical (1976-2005) and future (2021-2050) climate conditions. The results show that the combination of the GCM ensembles and the SIMHYD, HBV, XAJ, and VIC models exhibit similar growth patterns in the reservoir inflow and operational benefits for the future period. However, the DBN model produces consistent decreases in most cases, which may be attributed to its inability to generate accurate estimates of extreme events. The results indicate that hydrological models may be extensively utilized in decision making with greater confidence, and the data-driven model should be interpreted with caution when used in hydrological climate change impact studies. The efficiency metrics suggest that decision makers should focus more on increasing operational benefits, which can subsequently enhance reservoir sustainability. Overall, the framework proposed in this study provides a foundation for evaluating the reservoir sustainability and adaptability to climate change from water managers' perspective.
C1 [Xu, Wenxin; Chen, Jie; Su, Tianhua; Kim, Jong-Suk; Gu, Lei] Wuhan Univ, State Key Lab Water Resources & Hydropower Engn S, Wuhan 430072, Peoples R China.
   [Xu, Wenxin; Chen, Jie; Su, Tianhua; Kim, Jong-Suk; Gu, Lei] Wuhan Univ, Hubei Key Lab Water Syst Sci Sponge City Construc, Wuhan 430072, Peoples R China.
   [Lee, Joo-Heon] Joongbu Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Goyang Si 10279, Gyeunggi Do, South Korea.
   [Lee, Joo-Heon] Joongbu Univ, Drought Res Ctr, Goyang Si 10279, Gyeunggi Do, South Korea.
C3 Wuhan University; Wuhan University; Joongbu University; Joongbu
   University
RP Chen, J (corresponding author), Wuhan Univ, State Key Lab Water Resources & Hydropower Engn S, Wuhan 430072, Peoples R China.; Chen, J (corresponding author), Wuhan Univ, Hubei Key Lab Water Syst Sci Sponge City Construc, Wuhan 430072, Peoples R China.
EM 2015301580222@whu.edu.cn; jiechen@whu.edu.cn; 576019449@qq.com;
   jongsuk@uos.ac.kr; shisan@hust.edu.cn; leejh@joongbu.ac.kr
RI Gu, Lei/A-7052-2011; Kim, Jong-Suk/ABC-9255-2021
OI Kim, Jong-Suk/0000-0002-5274-5085; Gu, Lei/0000-0001-8291-9894
FU Hubei Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [2020CFA100];
   Natural Science Foundation of China [51779176, 52079093]; Overseas
   Expertise Introduction Project for Discipline Innovation (111 Project) -
   Ministry of Education and State Administration of Foreign Experts
   Affairs, P.R. China [B18037]
FX This work was partially supported by the Hubei Provincial Natural
   Science Foundation of China (No. 2020CFA100), the Natural Science
   Foundation of China (Grant Nos. 51779176 and 52079093), and the Overseas
   Expertise Introduction Project for Discipline Innovation (111 Project)
   funded by the Ministry of Education and State Administration of Foreign
   Experts Affairs, P.R. China (Grant No. B18037). The authors would like
   to acknowledge contributions from the World Climate Research Program
   Working Group on Coupled Modelling, and to thank climate modeling groups
   for providing their respective climate model outputs. The authors wish
   to thank the National Climatic Center of China Meteorological
   Administration and Bureau of Hydrology of the Changjiang Water Resources
   Commission for providing the data set for the Hanjiang River Basin.
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NR 87
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 7
U2 120
PU ASCE-AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
PI RESTON
PA 1801 ALEXANDER BELL DR, RESTON, VA 20191-4400 USA
SN 0733-9496
EI 1943-5452
J9 J WATER RES PLAN MAN
JI J. Water Resour. Plan. Manage.-ASCE
PD FEB 1
PY 2022
VL 148
IS 2
AR 05021029
DI 10.1061/(ASCE)WR.1943-5452.0001501
PG 19
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA XO7WB
UT WOS:000730389900013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Scherger, LE
   Valdes-Abellan, J
   Zanello, V
   Lexow, C
AF Scherger, Leonardo E.
   Valdes-Abellan, Javier
   Zanello, Victoria
   Lexow, Claudio
TI Projecting Climate Change Effect on Soil Water Fluxes and Urea
   Fertilizer Fate in the Semiarid Pampas of Argentina
SO EARTH SYSTEMS AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Weather generator; Nitrogen compounds fate; Argentine
   Pampas; HYDRUS 1D
ID HYDRAULIC CONDUCTIVITY; PRECIPITATION EXTREMES; NITROGEN; DYNAMICS;
   TEMPERATURE; IRRIGATION; MANAGEMENT; SCENARIOS; TRENDS; REGION
AB The economy of the semiarid region of the Argentine Pampas is based mainly on agriculture, so climate change is a fact that may have great influence on this type of activity. Therefore, it is necessary to evaluate future climate scenarios and the responses of hydrological variables such as precipitation, actual (ETreal) and potential evapotranspiration (ETc), and recharge rate. Climate change scenarios were based on temperature and precipitation variations predicted by CMIP5. Four representative concentrations pathways (RCP) were considered according to different greenhouse emissions to the atmosphere for the nearby future until the end of the twenty-first century (RCP2.6, RCP4.5, RCP6.0 and RCP8.5). Furthermore, one more scenario called RCP0.0 was considered, which is related to the actual climate conditions and represents the base line. In the study area, nitrogen (N) fertilization is a widely used practice to increase crop yields. This work assesses the impact of future climate on soil water fluxes and N compounds fate based on numerical simulations carried out with HYDRUS 1D. Actual evapotranspiration is going to increase between 1 and 6% from low to high climate-change scenarios. Although an increase in precipitation is also expected during all months of the year, there are periods when water availability will not be enough to supply the new potential evapotranspiration demand. The worst case is RCP8.5, where the ETreal/ETc ratio is expected to decline by 4%. Annual recharge is expected to decrease by 2.5% in the RCP2.6 scenario, while the rest of the scenarios shown positive trends. N leachate in the form of nitrates showed an increase of 2.8% in the RCP4.5 scenario which was also the one with the highest recharge rate raise. The use of a mathematical model as a predictive tool in soil water fluxes and fertilizers use is essential for planning the sustainable management of agroecology adapted to climate changes.
C1 [Scherger, Leonardo E.; Zanello, Victoria] Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, CCT Bahia Blanca, Bahia Blanca, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
   [Scherger, Leonardo E.; Zanello, Victoria; Lexow, Claudio] Univ Nacl Sur UNS, Dept Geol, Av Alem 1253, RA-8000 Bahia Blanca, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
   [Valdes-Abellan, Javier] Univ Alicante UA, Dept Ingn Civil, Alicante, Spain.
C3 Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET);
   National University of the South; Universitat d'Alacant
RP Scherger, LE (corresponding author), Consejo Nacl Invest Cient & Tecn, CCT Bahia Blanca, Bahia Blanca, Buenos Aires, Argentina.; Scherger, LE (corresponding author), Univ Nacl Sur UNS, Dept Geol, Av Alem 1253, RA-8000 Bahia Blanca, Buenos Aires, Argentina.
EM leonardo.scherger@uns.edu.ar
RI Scherger, Leonardo/AAI-4753-2021; Valdes-Abellan, Javier/K-1993-2017
OI Valdes-Abellan, Javier/0000-0003-3570-4983; Leonardo Ezequiel,
   Scherger/0000-0002-8361-6315; Zanello, Victoria/0000-0001-8889-1925
FU Universidad Nacional del Sur (UNS); Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones
   Cientificas y Tecnicas (CONICET)
FX This research is financially supported by the Universidad Nacional del
   Sur (UNS) and Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Cientificas y Tecnicas
   (CONICET).
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NR 68
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 2
PU SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2509-9426
EI 2509-9434
J9 EARTH SYST ENVIRON
JI Earth Syst. Environ.
PD SEP
PY 2022
VL 6
IS 3
BP 745
EP 758
DI 10.1007/s41748-021-00289-4
EA JAN 2022
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA 3W6JU
UT WOS:000739796500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, YP
   Xu, JL
   Jiang, Y
   Mandra, T
   Rademacher, TT
   Xue, F
   Dong, MY
   Pederson, N
AF Zhang, Yiping
   Xu, Junliang
   Jiang, Yuan
   Mandra, Tessa
   Rademacher, Tim T.
   Xue, Feng
   Dong, Manyu
   Pederson, Neil
TI Higher plasticity of water uptake in spruce than larch in an alpine
   habitat of North-Central China
SO AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Water availability; Tree growth; Stable isotope; Microcore;
   Precipitation hysteresis; Phenology
ID GROWTH-RESPONSES; SOIL-WATER; SAP-FLOW; STABLE-ISOTOPES; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   RADIAL GROWTH; DROUGHT; FOREST; TREES; STEM
AB Understanding interspecific differences in tree water use will aid in the assessment of both tree-level ecophysiological adaptation to climate change and forecasts of forest dynamics. We investigated the seasonal variation of water sources between two co-occurring trees species with contrasting leaf phenology and rooting traits: the deciduous Larix principis-rupprechtii Mayr. and the evergreen Picea meyeri Rehd. et Wils. At weekly/biweekly intervals from September 2013 to October 2014 in the Luya Mountains in North-Central China, we collected and analyzed a total of approximately 2400 samples of delta D and delta O-1(8) in tree xylem water, potential water sources for all study trees, and the contribution of water at different soil depths. Concurrently, we monitored leaf phenology by direct observation and wood phenology with the microcore method. Microcoring allowed us to trace intra-annual dynamics of word formation (i.e., onset, end, and maximum growth rate). These results, including a seasonal origin index, indicated that winter snowmelt water is sourced for growth initiation for both larch and spruce, although larch relies on it more than spruce. Larch and spruce mainly absorbed water from the same soil layer of 10-20 cm during the growing season (circa 38.9% and 37.5% of total water uptake, respectively). However, this potential inter-specific water competition did not increase until growth rates reached the maximum for the year; larch used more water from deeper soil layers while spruce used water generally equally from each soil layer. Unlike deeper-rooting larch, the more shallow-rooted spruce showed a greater ability to shift water uptake among various soil layers. This plasticity in water uptake was accompanied by tighter stomatal regulation, suggesting spruce growth is generally more tightly coupled to water availability. Such diverging species-specific water use strategies improve our knowledge on tree-level ecophysiological mechanisms, with implications for understanding ecosystem-level forest dynamics and potential resilience to environmental stress.
C1 [Zhang, Yiping; Xu, Junliang] Henan Univ Sci & Technol, Coll Hort & Plant Protect, Luoyang 471003, Peoples R China.
   [Jiang, Yuan; Xue, Feng; Dong, Manyu] Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, Beijing Key Lab Tradit Chinese Med Protect & Util, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
   [Mandra, Tessa; Rademacher, Tim T.; Pederson, Neil] Harvard Univ, Harvard Forest, Petersham, MA 01366 USA.
   [Rademacher, Tim T.] No Arizona Univ, Sch Informat Comp & Cyber Syst, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 USA.
   [Rademacher, Tim T.] No Arizona Univ, Ctr Ecosyst Sci & Soc, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 USA.
C3 Henan University of Science & Technology; Beijing Normal University;
   Harvard University; Northern Arizona University; Northern Arizona
   University
RP Jiang, Y (corresponding author), Beijing Normal Univ, Fac Geog Sci, Beijing Key Lab Tradit Chinese Med Protect & Util, Beijing 100875, Peoples R China.
EM jiangy@bnu.edu.cn
RI jiang, anyi/GPT-0379-2022; Zhang, Yiping/ABE-7896-2021; Zhang,
   Yiping/J-9076-2013
OI Zhang, Yiping/0000-0001-5666-8198; Xu, Junliang/0009-0008-3467-7411
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41630750, 41801026,
   42171049]; China Scholarship Council [201908410061, 201808410575]
FX This work is funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
   (Grant Nos. 41630750, 41801026 and 42171049) and the China Scholarship
   Council (Grant Nos. 201908410061 and 201808410575).
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NR 106
TC 15
Z9 16
U1 9
U2 80
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0168-1923
EI 1873-2240
J9 AGR FOREST METEOROL
JI Agric. For. Meteorol.
PD DEC 15
PY 2021
VL 311
AR 108696
DI 10.1016/j.agrformet.2021.108696
EA OCT 2021
PG 15
WC Agronomy; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA WV6QZ
UT WOS:000717360500013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lai, CH
   Liao, PC
   Chen, SH
   Wang, YC
   Cheng, CW
   Wu, CF
AF Lai, Chun-Hsien
   Liao, Pi-Ching
   Chen, Szu-Hung
   Wang, Yung-Chieh
   Cheng, Chingwen
   Wu, Chen-Fa
TI Risk Perception and Adaptation of Climate Change: An Assessment of
   Community Resilience in Rural Taiwan
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate risk perception; climate actions; rural community resilience;
   rural sustainable development; disaster risk reduction
ID PUBLIC PERCEPTION; IMPACTS; VULNERABILITY; DISASTER; VARIABILITY;
   BEHAVIOR; HAZARDS
AB Over the last five decades, there has been a decline of rural communities in Taiwan due to urbanization expansion. In the past 10 years, the central government has implemented the Rural Regeneration Project (RRP) aimed at revitalization and sustainable development in rural Taiwan. During the project's implementation, communities have faced several disasters as a result of climate change-induced extreme rainfall events. Perceptions and adaptation practices of climate change-induced extreme events are critical to community sustainability and resilience. The gap between perceived and actual risks that communities experience creates challenges for policy-makers in achieving sustainability goals. This study aims to evaluate the perceived climate change-induced flooding hazard perceptions compared to the scientific projection and actual hazard events in 287 rural communities implementing the RRP. This study revealed consistency in risk perception, in that communities facing high potential exposure to extreme rainfall showed higher awareness of various impacts of climate change. However, when comparing climate actions, communities exposed to low-potential hazard areas had a relatively higher degree of recognition of the benefits of adaptation to climate change. Moreover, 59 rural communities with low awareness and exposed to high potentials of extreme events were widely distributed among hills of western, southern, and northern Taiwan, where compound disasters such as mudslides can occur. This research suggests that there is a need to integrate climate change planning and work with communities to bridge the gap between perceived and actual climate risks. In particular, capacity training, counseling services, and implementation of adaptation practices should be integrated into institutional planning and management for providing assistance in disaster prevention, relief, and post-event restoration; also, encouraging climate actions can directly improve community resilience toward climate change. While investing in the sustainable development of rural communities is largely based on revitalizing economic development, this study revealed the link to ensure resilience and social-ecological sustainability in rural communities under climate change impacts.
C1 [Lai, Chun-Hsien; Wang, Yung-Chieh] Natl Chung Hsing Univ, Dept Soil & Water Conservat, Taichung 402, Taiwan.
   [Liao, Pi-Ching; Wu, Chen-Fa] Natl Chung Hsing Univ, Dept Hort, Taichung 402, Taiwan.
   [Chen, Szu-Hung] Natl Chung Hsing Univ, Int Master Program Agr, Taichung 402, Taiwan.
   [Cheng, Chingwen] Arizona State Univ, Design Sch, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA.
C3 National Chung Hsing University; National Chung Hsing University;
   National Chung Hsing University; Arizona State University; Arizona State
   University-Tempe
RP Wu, CF (corresponding author), Natl Chung Hsing Univ, Dept Hort, Taichung 402, Taiwan.
EM wulai.studio@smail.nchu.edu.tw; d105032007@mail.nchu.edu.tw;
   vickey@dragon.nchu.edu.tw; wangyc@nchu.edu.tw; Chingwen.Cheng@asu.edu;
   cfwu@dragon.nchu.edu.tw
RI Cheng, Chingwen/A-7152-2010
OI Wang, Yung-Chieh/0000-0002-8812-3894; Chen,
   Szu-Hung/0000-0003-0016-1982; Wu, Chen-Fa/0000-0001-9417-0681
FU Ministry of Science and Technology of the Republic of China, Taiwan
   [MOST 105-2621-M-005 -003 -MY3, 108-2625-M-005 -010]; Ministry of
   Education, Taiwan, R.O.C. under the Higher Education Sprout Project
FX The authors would like to thank the Ministry of Science and Technology
   of the Republic of China, Taiwan, for financially supporting this
   research under Contract No. MOST 105-2621-M-005 -003 -MY3,
   108-2625-M-005 -010 and the Ministry of Education, Taiwan, R.O.C. under
   the Higher Education Sprout Project.
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NR 71
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 9
U2 74
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD APR
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 7
AR 3651
DI 10.3390/su13073651
PG 15
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA RL4FM
UT WOS:000638931300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Curci, G
   Guijarro, JA
   Di Antonio, L
   Di Bacco, M
   Di Lena, B
   Scorzini, AR
AF Curci, Gabriele
   Guijarro, Jose A.
   Di Antonio, Ludovico
   Di Bacco, Mario
   Di Lena, Bruno
   Scorzini, Anna Rita
TI Building a local climate reference dataset: Application to the Abruzzo
   region (Central Italy), 1930-2019
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change detection indices; climate classification; climate time
   series; climate trend; homogenization
ID TEMPERATURE; PRECIPITATION; HOMOGENEITY
AB Reliable secular time series of essential climatic variables are a fundamental element for the assessment of vulnerability, impact and adaptation to climate change. Here, we implement a readily portable procedure for building an upgradable long-term homogeneous climate dataset using monthly and daily observations of temperature and precipitation over a given area of interest, exemplified here with Abruzzo, a region in Central Italy characterized by complex orography. We process the dataset according to a preliminary ranking of stations based on data quantity and quality, and we exploit the Climatol algorithm for inhomogeneity correction. The corrected time series show trends in broad agreement with external databases (CRU, Berkeley Earth, E-OBS), and highlight the importance of relying on a local network for a better representation of gradients and variability over the territory. We estimate that maximum (TX) and minimum temperature (TN) increased by similar to 1.6 and similar to 2.2 degrees C/century, respectively, over the period 1930-2019, while in the recent decades 1980-2019 we found an accelerated trend of similar to 5.7 and similar to 3.9 degrees C/century. Precipitation (RR) decreased by similar to 10%/century in 1930-2019, while it has been increasing at a rate of similar to 26%/century in 1980-2019. The Koppen-Geiger climate classification is sensitive to the increase of precipitation in the recent decades, which is attributable to decreased summer precipitation overcompensated by more rain in late spring and early autumn. The cold climate types are retreating upwards along the slopes of the mountain ranges. Over the period 1980-2019, extreme values are also displaying significant trends. Every 2 years, there is one less frost day (TN <0 degrees C) and one more summer day (TX >25 degrees C) in the Apennines area, while there is one more tropical night (TN >20 degrees C) in the Adriatic coastal area. Precipitation extremes are increasing, especially along the coast, with rain accumulated in the rainiest days increasing at a rate of 1-2%/year.
C1 [Curci, Gabriele; Di Antonio, Ludovico] Univ Aquila, Dipartimento Sci Fis & Chim, Laquila, Italy.
   [Curci, Gabriele] Univ Aquila, Ctr Excellence Telesensing Environm & Model Predi, Laquila, Italy.
   [Guijarro, Jose A.; Scorzini, Anna Rita] Agencia Estatal Meteorol AEMET, Delegac Terr Illes Balears, Palma De Mallorca, Spain.
   [Di Bacco, Mario] Univ Aquila, Dipartimento Ingn Civile, Edile Architettura, Ambientale, Laquila, Italy.
   [Di Lena, Bruno] Ctr Agrometeorol Reg, Scerni, Regione Abruzzo, Italy.
C3 University of L'Aquila; University of L'Aquila; Agencia Estatal de
   Meteorologia (AEMET); University of L'Aquila
RP Curci, G (corresponding author), Univ Aquila, Dipartimento Sci Fis & Chim, Laquila, Italy.
EM gabriele.curci@univaq.it
RI Di Bacco, Mario/AAZ-6559-2020; Guijarro, José/L-3744-2014; Curci,
   Gabriele/A-2020-2011; Di Antonio, Ludovico/JLL-9820-2023
OI Curci, Gabriele/0000-0001-9871-5570; Di Antonio,
   Ludovico/0000-0003-0528-7082; Di Bacco, Mario/0000-0002-2483-3977
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NR 53
TC 25
Z9 25
U1 0
U2 8
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0899-8418
EI 1097-0088
J9 INT J CLIMATOL
JI Int. J. Climatol.
PD JUN 30
PY 2021
VL 41
IS 8
BP 4414
EP 4436
DI 10.1002/joc.7081
EA MAR 2021
PG 23
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA SS0YO
UT WOS:000633931400001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, CL
   Feng, LP
   Wu, L
   Cheng, C
   Li, YZ
   Yan, JT
   Gao, JC
   Chen, F
AF Wang, Chunlei
   Feng, Liping
   Wu, Lu
   Cheng, Chen
   Li, Yizhuo
   Yan, Jintao
   Gao, Jiachen
   Chen, Fu
TI Assessment of Genotypes and Management Strategies to Improve Resilience
   of Winter Wheat Production
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; winter wheat; adaption; virtual cultivar; North China
   Plain
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; WATER-USE; YIELD; CHINA; MODEL; TEMPERATURE;
   PHOTOPERIOD; SIMULATION; AUSTRALIA; IDEOTYPE
AB Climate is a main factor that influences the winter wheat production. Changing the crop cultivars and adjusting the sowing dates are used as strategies to adapt to climate change. First, we evaluated the simulation ability of the Decision Support System for Agro-technology Transfer (DSSAT) CERES wheat model based on the experimental data with varied sowing dates and cultivars. Second, we designed optimal cultivars in three different environmental conditions with the highest grain yield in the North China Plain (NCP) based on model sensitivity analysis. Furthermore, we optimized the sowing dates for three sites with the above-derived cultivar parameters. The results showed that the DSSAT-CERES wheat model was suitable for winter wheat simulation after calibration and validation with a Normalized Root Mean Square Error (NRMSE) between 0.9% and 9.5% for phenology, 6.8% and 17.8% for above ground biomass, and 4.6% and 9.7% for grain yield. The optimal cultivars significantly prolonged the wheat growth duration by 14.1, 27.5, and 24.4 days at the Shangzhuang (SZ), Xingtai (XT), and Zhumadian (ZMD) sites compared with current cultivars, respectively. The vegetative growth duration (from sowing to anthesis) was prolonged 18.4 and 12.2 days at the XT and ZMD sites significantly, while shortened 0.81 days at the SZ site. The grain yield could be potentially improved by 29.5%, 86.8%, and 34.6% at the SZ, XT, and ZMD sites using the optimal cultivars, respectively. Similarly, the improvement of aboveground biomass at three sites was 5.5%, 47.1%, and 12.7%, respectively. Based on the guaranteed rate and analysis of variance, we recommended a later sowing date (from 15 September to 20 October) at the SZ and ZMD sites, and 15 September to 15 October at the XT site. In addition, the methodology of this study could be expanded to other regions and possibly to other crops.
C1 [Wang, Chunlei; Feng, Liping; Wu, Lu; Cheng, Chen; Li, Yizhuo; Yan, Jintao; Gao, Jiachen] China Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Fu] China Agr Univ, Coll Agron & Biotechnol, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
C3 China Agricultural University; China Agricultural University
RP Feng, LP (corresponding author), China Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
EM clwang@cau.edu.cn; fenglp@cau.edu.cn; wulu_agrimeteo@cau.edu.cn;
   chengc1993@cau.edu.cn; lyz950423@cau.edu.cn; B20183030266@cau.edu.cn;
   gaojiachen@cau.edu.cn; chenfu@cau.edu.cn
RI Yan, jintao/KRR-2005-2024
OI Cheng, Chen/0000-0003-3078-6238; Wang, Chunlei/0000-0003-2816-8844
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFD0300201]
FX This research was funded by the National Key Research and Development
   Program of China, grant number 2016YFD0300201.
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NR 55
TC 1
Z9 2
U1 5
U2 28
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB 2
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 4
AR 1474
DI 10.3390/su12041474
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KY3GT
UT WOS:000522460200192
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Elmberg, J
   Arzel, C
   Gunnarsson, G
   Holopainen, S
   Nummi, P
   Poysa, H
   Sjoberg, K
AF Elmberg, Johan
   Arzel, Celine
   Gunnarsson, Gunnar
   Holopainen, Sari
   Nummi, Petri
   Poysa, Hannu
   Sjoberg, Kjell
TI Population change in breeding boreal waterbirds in a 25-year
   perspective: What characterises winners and losers?
SO FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE breeding phenology; diet; distribution; life history; waterfowl
ID SWANS CYGNUS-CYGNUS; LIFE-HISTORY; SPRING PHENOLOGY; BIRD POPULATIONS;
   SPECIES NUMBER; NORTH-AMERICA; WHOOPER SWAN; TRENDS; PATTERNS;
   VEGETATION
AB Understanding drivers of variation and trends in biodiversity change is a general scientific challenge, but also crucial for conservation and management. Previous research shows that patterns of increase and decrease are not always consistent at different spatial scales, calling for approaches combining the latter. We here explore the idea that functional traits of species may help explaining divergent population trends. Complementing a previous community level study, we here analyse data about breeding waterbirds on 58 wetlands in boreal Fennoscandia, covering gradients in latitude as well as trophic status. We used linear mixed models to address how change in local abundance over 25 years in 25 waterbird species are associated with life history traits, diet, distribution, breeding phenology, and habitat affinity. Mean abundance increased in 10 species from 1990/1991 to 2016, whereas it decreased in 15 species. Local population increases were associated with species that are early breeders and have small clutches, an affinity for luxurious wetlands, an herbivorous diet, and a wide breeding range rather than a southern distribution. Local decreases, by contrast, were associated with species having large clutches and invertivorous diet, as well as being late breeders and less confined to luxurious wetlands. The three species occurring on the highest number of wetlands all decreased in mean abundance. The fact that early breeders have done better than late fits well with previous research about adaptability to climate change, that is, response to earlier springs. We found only limited support for the idea that life history traits are good predictors of wetland level population change. Instead, diet turned out to be a strong candidate for an important driver of population change, as supported by a general decrease of invertivores and a concomitant increase of large herbivores. In a wider perspective, future research needs to address whether population growth of large-bodied aquatic herbivores affects abundance of co-occurring invertivorous species, and if so, if this is due to habitat alteration, or to interference or exploitative competition.
C1 [Elmberg, Johan; Gunnarsson, Gunnar] Kristianstad Univ, Dept Environm Sci & Biosci, SE-29188 Kristianstad, Sweden.
   [Arzel, Celine] Univ Turku, Dept Biol, Turku, Finland.
   [Arzel, Celine; Holopainen, Sari; Nummi, Petri] Univ Helsinki, Dept Forest Sci, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Poysa, Hannu] Nat Resources Inst Finland Luke, Nat Resources, Joensuu, Finland.
   [Sjoberg, Kjell] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dept Wildlife Fish & Environm Studies, Lima, Sweden.
C3 Kristianstad University; University of Turku; University of Helsinki;
   Natural Resources Institute Finland (Luke); Swedish University of
   Agricultural Sciences
RP Elmberg, J (corresponding author), Kristianstad Univ, Dept Environm Sci & Biosci, SE-29188 Kristianstad, Sweden.
EM Johan.Elmberg@hkr.se
RI Pöysä, Hannu/JBS-4832-2023; Nummi, Petri/AAU-9666-2021; Gunnarsson,
   Gunnar/G-8458-2014; Arzel, Celine/B-7937-2018
OI Holopainen, Sari/0000-0002-3271-4468; Gunnarsson,
   Gunnar/0000-0003-2345-3953; Arzel, Celine/0000-0002-1866-2067; Poysa,
   Hannu/0000-0002-1585-2375
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NR 86
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 0
U2 46
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0046-5070
EI 1365-2427
J9 FRESHWATER BIOL
JI Freshw. Biol.
PD FEB
PY 2020
VL 65
IS 2
BP 167
EP 177
DI 10.1111/fwb.13411
PG 11
WC Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA KA6QK
UT WOS:000505921100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Zinkernagel, J
   Schmidt, N
   Kahlen, K
AF Zinkernagel, Jana
   Schmidt, Nadine
   Kahlen, Katrin
BE Edwards, D
   Oldroyd, G
TI Changing Thermal Growing Season and Climatic Water Balance affect
   Irrigation and Cultivation Period of Vegetables
SO AGRICULTURE AND CLIMATE CHANGE - ADAPTING CROPS TO INCREASED UNCERTAINTY
   (AGRI 2015)
SE Procedia Environmental Sciences
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 4th International Conference on Agriculture and Horticulture (AGRI)
CY FEB 15-17, 2015
CL Amsterdam, NETHERLANDS
DE climate change; global climate models; irrigation scheduling; regional
   climate models; onion; temperature sum
AB Today, vegetable production is already limited by local climate and water availability. Knowledge has to be generated for crop management adapted to climate change. Evaluating potential consequences for vegetable production in a model growing region is the scope of this investigation. Simulations of climate conditions and in that respect the use of different climate models allow estimating a broad range of scenarios affecting cultivation. Analysis focuses on climatic parameters relevant for future irrigation demand. By estimating the climatic water balance (CWB), seasonal water demand and crop specific vulnerabilities to water deficit can be revealed. These objectives require knowledge of potential changes in time and duration of vegetable cultivation, gained from analysing thermal growing season (TGS).
   A broad range of scenarios was achieved for the German region "Hessian Reed" by applying A1B scenario and using the regional models WETTREG 2010, C-CLM and REMO, driven by the global models ECHAM5 and HadCM3, respectively. Simulations cover the period from 1971 to 2100; the validation is based on the period 1971 to 2000. For onion, crop specific CWB was calculated by employing crop coefficients of the Geisenheim Irrigation Scheduling, following FAO-56. TGS was derived from simulated onset and duration of plant growth stages based on temperature sum.
   Precipitation pattern vary between the models, but still follow a similar trend to higher evaporative demand. CWB decreases by 3 mm/d (WETTREG) and 2 mm/d (C-CLM), respectively. Maximum duration of dry periods increases from 33 to 53 d and occur more frequently from 343 to 457 times for REMO, representing maxima compared to C-CLM and WETTREG. TGS shifts from DOY 60 to 21 for sowing date, but extends from DOY 183 to 208 due to lower temperature (C-CLM). In contrast to the expected increasing irrigation demand in case of unchanged TGS, CWB becomes less negative with TGS-shift. (C) 2015 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
C1 [Zinkernagel, Jana; Schmidt, Nadine; Kahlen, Katrin] Geisenheim Univ, Dept Vegetable Crops, Von Lade Str 1, D-65366 Geisenheim, Germany.
RP Zinkernagel, J (corresponding author), Geisenheim Univ, Dept Vegetable Crops, Von Lade Str 1, D-65366 Geisenheim, Germany.
EM Jana.Zinkernagel@hs-gm.de
NR 0
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 7
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA SARA BURGERHARTSTRAAT 25, PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1878-0296
J9 PROCEDIA ENVIRON SCI
PY 2015
VL 29
BP 51
EP 52
DI 10.1016/j.proenv.2015.07.153
PG 2
WC Agronomy
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture
GA BF4HW
UT WOS:000380953000029
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, XC
   Chen, FJ
   Chen, YL
   Gao, Q
   Yang, XL
   Yuan, LX
   Zhang, FS
   Mi, GH
AF Chen, Xiaochao
   Chen, Fanjun
   Chen, Yanling
   Gao, Qiang
   Yang, Xiaoli
   Yuan, Lixing
   Zhang, Fusuo
   Mi, Guohua
TI Modern maize hybrids in Northeast China exhibit increased yield
   potential and resource use efficiency despite adverse climate change
SO GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; dry matter accumulation; grain nitrogen concentration;
   maize; post-silking; stay-green; yield potential
ID NITROGEN UPTAKE; REMOBILIZATION; AGRICULTURE; ADAPTATION; COMPONENTS;
   HETEROSIS; DROUGHT
AB The impact of global changes on food security is of serious concern. Breeding novel crop cultivars adaptable to climate change is one potential solution, but this approach requires an understanding of complex adaptive traits for climate-change conditions. In this study, plant growth, nitrogen (N) uptake, and yield in relation to climatic resource use efficiency of nine representative maize cultivars released between 1973 and 2000 in China were investigated in a 2-year field experiment under three N applications. The Hybrid-Maize model was used to simulate maize yield potential in the period from 1973 to 2011. During the past four decades, the total thermal time (growing degree days) increased whereas the total precipitation and sunshine hours decreased. This climate change led to a reduction of maize potential yield by an average of 12.9% across different hybrids. However, the potential yield of individual hybrids increased by 118.5 similar to kg similar to ha-1 similar to yr-1 with increasing year of release. From 1973 to 2000, the use efficiency of sunshine hours, thermal time, and precipitation resources increased by 37%, 40%, and 41%, respectively. The late developed hybrids showed less reduction in yield potential in current climate conditions than old cultivars, indicating some adaptation to new conditions. Since the mid-1990s, however, the yield impact of climate change exhibited little change, and even a slight worsening for new cultivars. Modern breeding increased ear fertility and grain-filling rate, and delayed leaf senescence without modification in net photosynthetic rate. The trade-off associated with delayed leaf senescence was decreased grain N concentration rather than increased plant N uptake, therefore N agronomic efficiency increased simultaneously. It is concluded that modern maize hybrids tolerate the climatic changes mainly by constitutively optimizing plant productivity. Maize breeding programs in the future should pay more attention to cope with the limiting climate factors specifically.
C1 [Chen, Xiaochao; Chen, Fanjun; Chen, Yanling; Yang, Xiaoli; Yuan, Lixing; Zhang, Fusuo; Mi, Guohua] China Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Ctr Resources Environm & Food Secur, Key Lab Plant Soil Interact,MOE, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
   [Gao, Qiang] Jilin Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Changchun 130118, Peoples R China.
C3 China Agricultural University; Jilin Agricultural University
RP Mi, GH (corresponding author), China Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Ctr Resources Environm & Food Secur, Key Lab Plant Soil Interact,MOE, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
EM miguohua@cau.edu.cn
RI Zhang, Fusuo/AAV-4517-2021; Gao, Qiang/KFT-1363-2024; chen,
   yanling/GRE-8287-2022; Yuan, Lixing/I-2727-2012
OI zhang, fusuo/0000-0001-8971-0129; Yuan, Lixing/0000-0003-0233-6184;
   Chen, Fanjun/0000-0001-8105-1683
FU National Basic Research Program (973 Program) of China [2009CB11860,
   2011CB100305]; National Nature Science Foundation of China [31272233,
   31121062]; Special Fund for the Agricultural Profession [201103003]
FX This work is supported by the National Basic Research Program (973
   Program) of China (nos. 2009CB11860; 2011CB100305), the National Nature
   Science Foundation of China (nos. 31272233 and 31121062), and the
   Special Fund for the Agricultural Profession (201103003) for financial
   support. We thank Prof. Chen Xinping for introducing the Hybrid-Maize
   model.
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NR 48
TC 157
Z9 182
U1 6
U2 253
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1354-1013
EI 1365-2486
J9 GLOBAL CHANGE BIOL
JI Glob. Change Biol.
PD MAR
PY 2013
VL 19
IS 3
BP 923
EP 936
DI 10.1111/gcb.12093
PG 14
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 080CV
UT WOS:000314219700023
PM 23504848
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, GL
   Dong, JW
   Zhou, CP
   Xu, XL
   Wang, M
   Ouyang, H
   Xiao, XM
AF Zhang, Geli
   Dong, Jinwei
   Zhou, Caiping
   Xu, Xingliang
   Wang, Min
   Ouyang, Hua
   Xiao, Xiangming
TI Increasing cropping intensity in response to climate Warming in Tibetan
   Plateau, China
SO FIELD CROPS RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Tibetan Plateau; Agriculture; Climate warming; Cropping intensity;
   Brahmaputra River and its two Tributaries in Tibet Autonomous Region
   (BRIT)
ID ELEVATED CO2; AGRICULTURE; PHENOLOGY; IMPACTS; SYSTEMS
AB Effects of global warming on agriculture have attracted lots of attention; however, agricultural response to climate change has been hardly documented in alpine regions. The Tibetan Plateau (TP) has a low agricultural portion, but it is an increasing minority, which plays an important role in regional food security due to growing population. The region of Brahmaputra River and its two tributaries in Tibet Autonomous Region (BRIT) is the main alpine agricultural area in the TP. Rapid warming has substantially affected agro-climate resources there and altered cropland pattern as well as cropping intensity. In this study, we explored how climate warming affected cropping intensity in past decades in BRTT. The potentially spatial distributions of single and double cropping systems in different decades (1970s, 19805, 1990s and 2000s) were simulated based on a cropping suitability model, considering climatic, terrain and water factors. The results showed a significant increase of cropping intensity in some regions, in response to climate warming. The area suitable for single cropping increased from 19 110 km(2) in 1970s to 19 980 km(2) in 2000s, expanding from the downstream valleys of Lhasa River and Nyang Qu River of the tributaries of Brahmaputra to upstream valleys. The area suitable for double cropping gradually increased from 9 km(2) in 1970s to 2015 km(2) in 2000s, expanding from the lower reaches of Brahmaputra River in Lhoka Prefecture to the upper ones, as well as the Lhasa River tributaries. The upper limit elevation suitable for single cropping rose vertically from 5001 m above sea level (ASL) to 5032m ASL from 1970s to 2000s, meanwhile that of double cropping rose from 3608 m ASL to 3813 m ASL. Overall, increased cropland area and cropping intensity due to climatic warming could increase food production in BRIT to some extent. Further investigation about potential uncertain effects from warming is still needed for regional agricultural adaption to climate change. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Zhang, Geli; Zhou, Caiping; Xu, Xingliang; Wang, Min; Ouyang, Hua] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Ecosyst Network Observat & Modeling, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
   [Dong, Jinwei; Xiao, Xiangming] Univ Oklahoma, Ctr Spatial Anal, Dept Microbiol & Plant Biol, Norman, OK 73019 USA.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS; University of Oklahoma System; University of
   Oklahoma - Norman
RP Zhang, GL (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Ecosyst Network Observat & Modeling, 11A Datun Rd, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
EM zhanggl.08b@igsnrr.ac.cn
RI Zhang, Geli/O-2641-2013; Xiao, Xiangming/ABS-9360-2022; Xu,
   Xingliang/P-9916-2015; Dong, Jinwei/C-4949-2009
OI Xu, Xingliang/0000-0003-2869-4932; Xiao, Xiangming/0000-0003-0956-7428;
   Dong, Jinwei/0000-0001-5687-803X
FU Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research
   [200906003]; Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA05060700]; National Natural
   Science Foundation of China [41201055]; China Postdoctoral Science
   Foundation [2012M510532]; National Key Program for Developing Basic
   Science [2009CB421105]
FX This study was supported by the Innovative Project of the Institute of
   Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research (No. 200906003), and
   Strategic Pilot Program (No. XDA05060700) from the Chinese Academy of
   Sciences, the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No.
   41201055), China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2012M510532), and
   National Key Program for Developing Basic Science (No. 2009CB421105).
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NR 53
TC 59
Z9 75
U1 2
U2 118
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-4290
EI 1872-6852
J9 FIELD CROP RES
JI Field Crop. Res.
PD FEB 20
PY 2013
VL 142
BP 36
EP 46
DI 10.1016/j.fcr.2012.11.021
PG 11
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 102GC
UT WOS:000315831900005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Ellis-Jones, J
   Phiri, A
   Chibwe, T
   Gondwe, T
   Nhamo, N
AF Ellis-Jones, Jim
   Phiri, Alexander
   Chibwe, Terence
   Gondwe, Therese
   Nhamo, Nhamo
BE Nhamo, N
   Chikoye, D
   Gondwe, T
TI Taking to Scale Adaptable Climate Smart Technologies
SO SMART TECHNOLOGIES FOR SUSTAINABLE SMALLHOLDER AGRICULTURE: UPSCALING IN
   DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID EXTENSION
C1 [Ellis-Jones, Jim] Agr 4 Dev, Silsoe, Beds, England.
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C3 Lilongwe University of Agriculture & Natural Resources
RP Ellis-Jones, J (corresponding author), Agr 4 Dev, Silsoe, Beds, England.
RI Gondwe, Therese/HKV-9704-2023
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NR 22
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 0
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL ROAD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-12-810522-1; 978-0-12-810521-4
PY 2017
BP 183
EP 199
DI 10.1016/B978-0-12-810521-4.00009-8
PG 17
WC Agricultural Engineering; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA BI8FK
UT WOS:000415039900011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Devi, RM
AF Devi, Rinku Moni
BE Pande, CB
   Moharir, KN
   Singh, SK
   Pham, QB
   Elbeltagi, A
TI Toward Smart Agriculture for Climate Change Adaptation
SO CLIMATE CHANGE IMPACTS ON NATURAL RESOURCES, ECOSYSTEMS AND AGRICULTURAL
   SYSTEMS
SE Springer Climate
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Smart agriculture; Internet of Things; Climate change; Livelihood;
   Adaptation
AB Agriculture plays a significant role in food security and forms the backbone of the economic system of a country. The increase in population has led to an urgent need to balance demand and supply, threatening sustainability and putting pressure on agricultural systems. Furthermore, climate change challenges like extreme weather conditions, climatic changes, and environmental impact have adversely impacted agriculture and linked resources. Besides this, about 85% of Indian farmers are marginal and small landholders. About 60% of the net sown area is under rainfed agriculture, and this makes India vulnerable to climate change considerably affecting the cropping system, livestock, and soil and increasing pests and diseases. Climate change would have a serious impact on Indian agriculture in the coming years which would negatively impact some important crops leading to food insecurity. The present trend and scenario are evident that without an efficient measure, it would be very difficult to meet agro-demand of the country. Therefore, there is an urgent need of efficient measures of adaption and mitigation. Therefore, smart agriculture using IoT (Internet of Things) technology has opened up extremely productive ways for farmers, helps in managing agricultural systems, and deals with weather uncertainties and challenges improving resource management. It enables farmers to collect real-time data related to weather updates, irrigation, production, yield quality, and soil moisture and predict pest, diseases, and market information and strengthen good agricultural practices in farms. Additionally, IoT solutions along with smart practices in agriculture offer opportunities for innovation in climate adaptation reducing the ecological footprints and enhancing the livelihoods of farmers. Thus, the present paper aims to review the current and future trends of IoT in the Indian agriculture system, highlighting potential challenges and also its role in combating climate change. Additionally, the study recommends adoption of good agricultural practices, capacity building, and switching from traditional to precise farming with IoT-based technology. For future scope, institutional innovations, networking of farmers, regulatory authorities, clear policies supporting the necessary legal and market architecture for smart farming, and transparent data management system will be required.
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C3 Indian Institute of Forest Management
RP Devi, RM (corresponding author), Indian Inst Forest Management, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India.
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NR 41
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 8
U2 13
PU SPRINGER NATURE SWITZERLAND AG
PI BASEL
PA PICASSOPLATZ 4, BASEL, CH-4052, SWITZERLAND
SN 2352-0698
EI 2352-0701
BN 978-3-031-19061-2; 978-3-031-19059-9; 978-3-031-19058-2
J9 SPRINGER CLIMATE
PY 2023
BP 469
EP 482
DI 10.1007/978-3-031-19059-9_19
D2 10.1007/978-3-031-19059-9
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Water Resources
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA BW2HS
UT WOS:001116825600020
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hill, R
   Walsh, FJ
   Davies, J
   Sparrow, A
   Mooney, M
   Council, CL
   Wiser, RM
   Tengö, M
AF Hill, Rosemary
   Walsh, Fiona J.
   Davies, Jocelyn
   Sparrow, Ashley
   Mooney, Meg
   Council, Central Land
   Wiser, Russell M.
   Tengo, Maria
TI Knowledge co-production for Indigenous adaptation pathways: Transform
   post-colonial articulation complexes to empower local decision-making
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Articulation complex; Path generation; Social-ecological systems;
   Vulnerability; Resilience; Transformations
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; VULNERABILITY; GOVERNANCE; IDEOLOGY; LESSONS; SCIENCE;
   PEOPLES
AB Co-production between scientific and Indigenous knowledge has been identified as useful to generating adaptation pathways with Indigenous peoples, who are attached to their traditional lands and thus highly exposed to the impacts of climate change. However, ignoring the complex and contested histories of nation-state colonisation can result in naive adaptation plans that increase vulnerability. Here, through a case study in central Australia, we investigate the conditions under which co-production between scientific and Indigenous knowledge can support climate change adaptation pathways among place-attached Indigenous communities. A research team including scientists, Ltyentye Apurte Rangers and other staff from the Central Land Council first undertook activities to co-produce climate change presentations in the local Arrernte language; enable community members to identify potential adaptation actions; and implement one action, erosion control. Second, we reflected on the outcomes of these activities in order to unpack deeper influences. Applying the theory of articulation complexes, we show how ideologies, institutions and economies have linked Indigenous societies and the establishing Australian nation-state since colonisation. The sequence of complexes characterised as frontier, mission, pastoral, land-rights, community-development and re-centralisation, which is current, have both enabled and constrained adaptation options. We found knowledge co-production generates adaptation pathways when: (1) effective methods for knowledge co-production are used, based on deeply respectful partnerships, cultural governance and working together through five co-production tasks-prepare, communicate, discuss, bring together and apply; (2) Indigenous people have ongoing connection to their traditional territories to maintain their Indigenous knowledge; (3) the relationship between the Indigenous people and the nation-state empowers local decision-making and learning, which requires and creates consent, trust, accountability, reciprocity, and resurgence of Indigenous culture, knowledge and practices. These conditions foster the emergence of articulation complexes that enable the necessary transformative change from the colonial legacies. Both these conditions and our approach are likely to be relevant for place-attached Indigenous peoples across the globe in generating climate adaptation pathways.
C1 [Hill, Rosemary] CSIRO, Cairns, Australia.
   [Hill, Rosemary] James Cook Univ, Div Trop Environm & Soc, Cairns, Australia.
   [Walsh, Fiona J.] 9 Raggatt St, Alice Springs, NT, Australia.
   [Davies, Jocelyn] Charles Darwin Univ, Northern Inst, Alice Springs, NT, Australia.
   [Sparrow, Ashley] Arthur Rylah Inst, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Wiser, Russell M.] CSIRO, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
   [Tengo, Maria] Stockholm Resilience Ctr, Stockholm, Sweden.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   James Cook University; Charles Darwin University; Commonwealth
   Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO); Stockholm
   University
RP Hill, R (corresponding author), CSIRO, Cairns, Australia.; Hill, R (corresponding author), James Cook Univ, Div Trop Environm & Soc, Cairns, Australia.
EM ro.hill@csiro.au
RI Davies, Jocelyn/D-7058-2011; Tengö, Maria/AAC-5698-2020; Walsh,
   Fiona/D-4755-2011; Hill, Rosemary/A-6954-2011
OI Hill, Rosemary/0000-0002-7426-3132; Tengo, Maria/0000-0002-4776-3748;
   Walsh, Fiona/0000-0003-2816-2063
FU CSIRO Land and Water Flagship; Ninti One Ltd.; Central Land Council
   Ltyentye Apurte (Santa Teresa) Rangers; Tangentyere Council Aboriginal
   Corporation Land and Learning Program; National Environmental Science
   Program's Earth Systems and Climate Change Hub; Indigenous Land
   Corporation
FX This research was supported by a partnership between the CSIRO Land and
   Water Flagship and Ninti One Ltd., working in collaboration with the
   Central Land Council Ltyentye Apurte (Santa Teresa) Rangers and the
   Tangentyere Council Aboriginal Corporation Land and Learning Program.
   Financial support for the research was also provided through the
   National Environmental Science Program's Earth Systems and Climate
   Change Hub. We would like to acknowledge the continuing long-term
   financial support of the Indigenous Land Corporation that makes the
   Ltyentye Apurte Rangers' work possible. The Central Land Council Land
   Management section provided invaluable additional support to our work.
   We would like to acknowledge and thank the Eastern Arrernte Traditional
   Owners and Elders for the opportunity to work together on their
   traditional lands, and for their fine contributions to the project. We
   acknowledge the assistance of reviewers for their incisive comments on
   earlier drafts. Coauthors, Walsh, Davies and Sparrow were affiliated
   with CSIRO at the time of the research, and coauthor Moonee with
   Tangentyere Council Aboriginal Corporation Land and Learning Program.
   The research was conducted under ethics approval 81/13 from the CSIRO
   Social Science Human Research Ethics Committee and 13/183 from the
   Central Australian Human Research Ethics Committee.
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NR 69
TC 85
Z9 90
U1 1
U2 42
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD NOV
PY 2020
VL 65
AR 102161
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2020.102161
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA PL0JP
UT WOS:000602819700001
OA Green Accepted, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Torresan, S
   Critto, A
   Rizzi, J
   Zabeo, A
   Furlan, E
   Marcomini, A
AF Torresan, Silvia
   Critto, Andrea
   Rizzi, Jonathan
   Zabeo, Alex
   Furlan, Elisa
   Marcomini, Antonio
TI DESYCO: A decision support system for the regional risk assessment of
   climate change impacts in coastal zones
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Decision support systems (DSS); Risk assessment; Climate change
   adaptation; Multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA); Geographic
   information systems (GIS)
ID ECOLOGICAL RISK; ASSESSMENT METHODOLOGY; NATURAL HAZARDS; PART;
   MANAGEMENT; VENETO
AB Several decision support systems were developed in recent years to encourage climate adaptation planning in coastal areas, especially at a national to global scale. However, few prototypes are easy to use and accessible for decision-makers to evaluate and manage risks locally. DESYCO is a GIS based decision support system specifically designed to better understand the risks that climate change poses at the regional/subnational scale (e.g. the effect of sea level rise and coastal erosion on human assets and ecosystems) and set the context of strategic adaptation planning within Integrated Coastal Zone Management. It implements a Regional Risk Assessment (RRA) methodology allowing the spatial assessment of multiple climate change impacts in coastal areas and the ranking of key elements at risk (beaches, wetlands, protected areas, urban and agricultural areas). The core of the system is a Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) model used to operationalize the steps of the RRA (hazard, exposure, susceptibility, risk and damage assessment) by integrating a blend of information from climate scenarios (global/regional climate projections and hydrodynamic/hydrological simulations) and from non-climate vulnerability factors (physical, environmental and socio-economic features of the analysed system). User-friendly interfaces simplify the interaction with the system, providing guidance for risk mapping, results communication and understanding.
   DESYCO was applied to low-lying coastal plains and islands (the North Adriatic Sea, the Gulf of Gabes and the Republic of Mauritius), river basins and groundwater systems (Upper Plain of Veneto and Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Marche Region). The paper presents the RRA methodology, the structure of DESYCO and its software architecture, showing the capabilities of the tool to support decision making and climate proofing in a wide range of situations (e.g. shoreline planning, land use and water resource management, flood risk reduction). (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Torresan, Silvia; Critto, Andrea; Rizzi, Jonathan; Zabeo, Alex; Furlan, Elisa; Marcomini, Antonio] Ctr Euromediterraneo Cambiamenti Climatici CMCC, I-73100 Lecce, Italy.
   [Critto, Andrea; Rizzi, Jonathan; Zabeo, Alex; Furlan, Elisa; Marcomini, Antonio] Univ Ca Foscari Venice, Dept Environm Sci Informat & Stat, I-30172 Venice, Italy.
C3 Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti Climatici (CMCC); Universita Ca
   Foscari Venezia
RP Marcomini, A (corresponding author), Univ Ca Foscari Venice, Dept Environm Sci Informat & Stat, Via Torino 155, I-30172 Venice, Italy.
EM marcom@unive.it
RI Marcomini, Antonio/JSL-7114-2023; Zabeo, Alex/D-6715-2014; Rizzi,
   Jonathan/P-2004-2019; Furlan, Elisa/AAA-4247-2021
OI TORRESAN, Silvia/0000-0002-9758-7084; Rizzi,
   Jonathan/0000-0002-2549-3994; FURLAN, ELISA/0000-0001-6105-7447
FU Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research; Italian Ministry
   of Environment, Land and Sea under the GEMINA project
FX The research leading to these results has received funding from the
   Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research and the Italian
   Ministry of Environment, Land and Sea under the GEMINA project. The
   authors would like to acknowledge their colleagues Valentina Gallina for
   the valuable contribution in the development of the RRA methodology and
   Filippo Coro for the software implementation of DESYCO.
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TC 49
Z9 52
U1 1
U2 138
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD FEB
PY 2016
VL 120
BP 49
EP 63
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2015.11.003
PG 15
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA DB0TN
UT WOS:000368220500005
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Goto, EA
   Domingue, SJ
   Kalafatis, S
   Ramos, RG
   Salap-Ayça, S
AF Goto, Erica Akemi
   Domingue, Simone J.
   Kalafatis, Scott
   Ramos, Rafael G.
   Salap-Ayca, Seda
TI Do the type of impact and vulnerability dimension matter when assessing
   natural hazard vulnerability?
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability; Natural hazard; Property damage; Fatality; Injury;
   Natural hazard vulnerability
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE;
   UNITED-STATES; HURRICANE-KATRINA; NEW-ORLEANS; DISASTERS; FLOOD; RISK;
   RACE
AB Communities across the United States are continually impacted by natural hazards, leading to material and human losses. Natural Hazard Vulnerability (NHV) assessments can help identify variables that can increase the community's susceptibility to these losses. Several studies have assessed NHV, but few have accounted for specific losses or considered more than one dimension of vulnerability (typically, social vulnerability is assessed). This study assessed NHV at the county level in the United States, considering five dimensions (social, environmental, institutional, economic, and health) during two years (2000 and 2010) and accounting for damages and ca-sualties. Results provide valuable and generalized insights on how NVH manifests in society. It confirms that NHV should be assessed by particular impact and that it is dynamic: sets of variables associated with heightened losses can change over time and when evaluating distinct impacts (damages and casualties). This study emphasizes the importance of tailoring NHV assessments to specific impacts and underscores the dynamic nature of these assessments, providing valuable insights for both researchers and decision-makers enabling the development of more effective risk-reduction strategies.
C1 [Goto, Erica Akemi] Univ Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
   [Domingue, Simone J.] Tulane ByWater Inst, New Orleans, LA USA.
   [Kalafatis, Scott] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA USA.
   [Ramos, Rafael G.] Natl Inst Space Res, Sao Jose Dos Campos, Brazil.
   [Salap-Ayca, Seda] Brown Univ, Providence, RI USA.
C3 University of Arizona; University of Washington; University of
   Washington Seattle; Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (INPE);
   Brown University
RP Goto, EA (corresponding author), Univ Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
EM ericagoto@gmail.com
RI Goto, Erica/ADO-6121-2022; Ramos, Rafael/AAJ-5854-2020
OI Goto, Erica Akemi/0000-0003-1361-7213; Ramos, Rafael/0000-0001-9307-5922
FU NOAA [NA21OAR4310307]
FX This work was partially supported by NOAA award NA21OAR4310307 to GLISA
   at the University of Michigan, where the first author was a Postdoctoral
   Research Fellow.
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NR 76
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 10
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD NOV
PY 2023
VL 98
AR 104069
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2023.104069
EA OCT 2023
PG 23
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA Y0PX8
UT WOS:001102386400001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Appadoo, C
   Sultan, R
   Simier, M
   Tandrayen-Ragoobur, V
   Capello, M
AF Appadoo, Chandani
   Sultan, Riad
   Simier, Monique
   Tandrayen-Ragoobur, Verena
   Capello, Manuela
TI Artisanal fishers in small island developing states and their perception
   of environmental change: the case study of Mauritius
SO REVIEWS IN FISH BIOLOGY AND FISHERIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Small scale fishers; Climate change; Local ecological knowledge; Fishing
   strategies; Indian Ocean
ID LOCAL ECOLOGICAL KNOWLEDGE; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SMALL-SCALE
   FISHERIES; AGGREGATING DEVICES; FOOD SECURITY; IMPACTS; MANAGEMENT;
   STRATEGIES; VULNERABILITY; LIVELIHOODS
AB Small island developing states (SIDS) are highly dependent on coastal marine resources. Artisanal fishers in SIDS currently face multiple stressors related to global environmental change. Considering Mauritius (South Western Indian Ocean) as a case study, this paper characterizes artisanal fishers in SIDS and assesses their perception of global change using the Local Ecological Knowledge (LEK) approach. A semi-structured survey method was used to interview 247 fishers from all around the country. Artisanal fishers used multiple fishing areas and gears, with half of the fishers using Fish Aggregating Devices (FADs). Six main groups of fishers were identified according to their fishing strategies, which reflected different target species in their reported catches. The majority of fishers reported lower fish abundances and fewer species now compared to 10 to 15 years ago. All groups of fishers observed environmental change over the same period. Such ecological knowledge highlights the exposure of fishers to stressors induced by environmental change. The characterization of the groups of fishers and their fishing strategies will be useful to better evaluate adaptation strategies and support management measures to face global environmental change.
C1 [Appadoo, Chandani] Univ Mauritius, Fac Sci, Dept Biosci & Ocean Studies & Pole Res Excellence, Reduit, Mauritius.
   [Sultan, Riad; Tandrayen-Ragoobur, Verena] Univ Mauritius, Fac Social Sci & Humanities, Dept Econ & Stat, Reduit, Mauritius.
   [Simier, Monique; Capello, Manuela] Univ Montpellier, IFREMER, CNRS, MARBEC,IRD, Sete, France.
C3 University of Mauritius; University of Mauritius; Universite de
   Montpellier; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS);
   Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Ifremer
RP Appadoo, C (corresponding author), Univ Mauritius, Fac Sci, Dept Biosci & Ocean Studies & Pole Res Excellence, Reduit, Mauritius.
EM chandani@uom.ac.mu; r.sultan@uom.ac.mu; Monique.Simier@ird.fr;
   v.tandrayen@uom.ac.mu; manuela.capello@ird.fr
RI Capello, Manuela/G-7360-2016; SIMIER, Monique/O-4797-2019;
   Tandrayen-Ragoobur, Verena/L-1047-2019; Chandani, APPADOO/AFM-9330-2022
OI Chandani, APPADOO/0000-0002-4381-8238; Simier,
   Monique/0000-0002-8436-5925; Capello, Manuela/0000-0002-9206-011X
FU University of Mauritius [RFS-A: RA013]
FX This work was supported by the University of Mauritius [RFS-A: RA013,
   2018] with RS (Principal investigator), CA, VT, MC as Co-investigators.
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NR 100
TC 3
Z9 4
U1 6
U2 14
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0960-3166
EI 1573-5184
J9 REV FISH BIOL FISHER
JI Rev. Fish. Biol. Fish.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 33
IS 3
SI SI
BP 611
EP 628
DI 10.1007/s11160-022-09735-6
EA NOV 2022
PG 18
WC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA P6PB4
UT WOS:000879269000001
PM 36373093
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tan, XC
   Kong, LS
   Gu, BH
   Zeng, A
   Niu, MM
AF Tan, Xian-Chun
   Kong, Ling-Si
   Gu, Bai-He
   Zeng, An
   Niu, Miao-Miao
TI Research on the carbon neutrality governance under a polycentric
   approach
SO ADVANCES IN CLIMATE CHANGE RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate governance; Polycentricity; Carbon neutrality
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; URBAN GOVERNANCE; PARIS AGREEMENT; POLICY;
   POLITICS; NETWORKS; BELIEFS; ENERGY; CLUBS
AB Carbon neutrality has increasingly become a crucial agenda within global climate governance. Meanwhile, recent observations show that the governance architecture for carbon neutrality is transforming to polycentricity. However, there is still a lack of systematic investigation on carbon neutrality governance under the polycentric approach. Against this background, this study attempts to investigate the emergence and structure of polycentric climate governance, and to figure out to what extent the evolving polycentric system can contribute to the climate change governance towards carbon neutrality. The results show that efforts made by actors at transnational and subnational levels within the polycentric system can greatly complement the deficits of carbon neutrality governance by international regime and state government in many different domains. Besides, the identified issues, that are critical to carbon neutrality including climate legislation, adaptation, technology deployment and data authenticity and transparency, can be addressed in a more effective way through the coordination among multiple actors at multiple levels. Finally, further research should be conducted to address the dynamic linkages between international regimes as well as the issues related to small and medium-sized cities, and develop a comprehensive evaluation and accounting system for the risks and benefits of polycentric climate governance.
C1 [Tan, Xian-Chun; Kong, Ling-Si; Gu, Bai-He; Zeng, An; Niu, Miao-Miao] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Sci & Dev, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China.
   [Tan, Xian-Chun; Kong, Ling-Si; Niu, Miao-Miao] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sch Publ Policy & Management, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of
   Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS
RP Gu, BH (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Sci & Dev, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China.
EM gubaihe@casisd.cn
RI Zeng, An/AAG-9158-2021
OI Gu, Baihe/0000-0003-2257-8471
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFA0606504,
   2018YFC1509008]; National Natural Science Foundation of China [72140007,
   71804178, 71573249]
FX Financial support was obtained from the National Key Research and
   Development Program of China (2018YFA0606504, 2018YFC1509008) , and
   National Natural Science Foundation of China (72140007, 71804178,
   71573249) .
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NR 86
TC 22
Z9 23
U1 18
U2 121
PU KEAI PUBLISHING LTD
PI BEIJING
PA 16 DONGHUANGCHENGGEN NORTH ST, Building 5, Room 411, BEIJING, DONGCHENG
   DISTRICT 100009, PEOPLES R CHINA
SN 1674-9278
J9 ADV CLIM CHANG RES
JI Adv. Clim. Chang. Res.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 13
IS 2
BP 159
EP 168
DI 10.1016/j.accre.2022.01.005
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 0F1CP
UT WOS:000777105900002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schiavon, E
   Taramelli, A
   Tornato, A
AF Schiavon, Emma
   Taramelli, Andrea
   Tornato, Antonella
TI Modelling stakeholder perceptions to assess Green Infrastructures
   potential in agriculture through fuzzy logic: A tool for participatory
   governance
SO ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Green infrastructures; Fuzzy logic; User needs
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; FARMERS PREFERENCES; BIODIVERSITY; WATER;
   WILLINGNESS; MANAGEMENT; KNOWLEDGE; SCHEMES; DESIGN; SYSTEM
AB Solutions like Green Infrastructures can restore and maintain key regulative ecosystem services capable of mitigating disaster risk and contributing to climate change adaptation. Given the vulnerabilities that affect agriculture and its role in national economies, GI can play an important role in managing trade-offs between conflicting ecosystem services. However, their use is still lagging behind, and socio-economic dynamics in their uptake in the agricultural sector are partially disregarded. The uncertainty involved in the modelling of ecological processes can be reduced through the use of participatory processes and the involvement of relevant stakeholders to sustain decision-making processes. This article intends to assess stakeholders' perceptions on the implementation of Green Infrastructures in agriculture by capturing critical barriers and facilitators. The implementation of such Green Infrastructures policies is associated to different climate change trends in order to understand the effect of different scenarios on rural development. The study uses fuzzy logic to elicit the stakeholders' needs. The key results show that when there is uncertainty in the state of climate change trends, it is always more efficient to adopt progressive policies investing in the development and diffusion of Green Infrastructures.
C1 [Schiavon, Emma; Taramelli, Andrea] Ist Univ Studi Super Pavia IUSS, Piazza Vittoria 15, I-27100 Pavia, Italy.
   [Taramelli, Andrea; Tornato, Antonella] Inst Environm Protect & Res ISPRA, Via Vitaliano Brancati 48, I-00144 Rome, Italy.
C3 IUSS PAVIA; Italian Institute for Environmental Protection & Research
   (ISPRA)
RP Schiavon, E (corresponding author), Via Luigi Porta 10, I-27100 Pavia, Italy.
EM emma.schiavon@iusspavia.it; andrea.taramelli@iusspavia.it;
   antonella.tornato@isprambiente.it
OI Tornato, Antonella/0000-0003-2450-6375; Schiavon,
   Emma/0000-0001-9573-4303
FU EU DG ECHO project GREEN (Green infrastructures for disaster risk
   reduction protection: evidence, policy instruments and marketability)
   [ECHO/SUB/2016/740,172/PREV18]
FX This study has been partially funded by the EU DG ECHO project GREEN
   (Green infrastructures for disaster risk reduction protection: evidence,
   policy instruments and marketability; G.A.
   ECHO/SUB/2016/740,172/PREV18).
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NR 80
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 4
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2211-4645
EI 2211-4653
J9 ENVIRON DEV
JI Environ. Dev.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 40
AR 100671
DI 10.1016/j.envdev.2021.100671
EA NOV 2021
PG 20
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YJ1HC
UT WOS:000744287600008
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Loch, A
   Santato, S
   Pérez-Blanco, CD
   Mysiak, J
AF Loch, Adam
   Santato, Silvia
   Dionisio Perez-Blanco, C.
   Mysiak, Jaroslav
TI Measuring the Transaction Costs of Historical Shifts to Informal Drought
   Management Institutions in Italy
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE Po River Basin; institutional economics; climate change adaptation; cost
   of adaptation
ID POLICIES
AB Coase shows how costly resources are (re)allocated via costly institutions, and that transaction costs must therefore be positive. However, Coase did not elaborate on transitions between institutions which incur positive transaction costs that are characterized by numerous institutional complementarities; that is, feedback loops that inform the need for, and pathways toward, institutional change. Economic investigations of complementary modes of (re)allocation are rarely undertaken, let alone studies of transitions between modes. However, modes of (re)allocation that achieve similar results at less cost are generally viewed as having production-raising value. This paper measures the costs of transitioning drought management institutions in Italy toward informal, participatory, and consensus-based approaches during several recent drought events. The chosen model is Drought Steering Committees, which offer a substitute for current formal (less flexible) planning approaches, and where lower transaction costs that are associated with the transition are inferred. Our results highlight the relevance of empirical assessments of 'costly' transitions based on a historical study of transaction costs, as well as supporting previous works that highlight the value of contextual analysis in economic studies, in order to identify the benefits of institutional investment.
C1 [Loch, Adam] Univ Adelaide, Ctr Global Food & Resources, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
   [Santato, Silvia; Mysiak, Jaroslav] Ctr Euromediterraneo Cambiamenti Climat, I-30175 Venezia Marghera, Italy.
   [Santato, Silvia; Mysiak, Jaroslav] Univ Ca Foscari Venezia, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
   [Dionisio Perez-Blanco, C.] Univ Salamanca, Dept Econ & Hist Econ, Salamanca 37007, Spain.
C3 University of Adelaide; Universita Ca Foscari Venezia; University of
   Salamanca
RP Pérez-Blanco, CD (corresponding author), Univ Salamanca, Dept Econ & Hist Econ, Salamanca 37007, Spain.
EM adam.loch@adelaide.edu.au; silvia.santato@cmcc.it;
   Dionisio.perez@usal.es; jaroslay.mysiak@cmcc.it
RI Loch, Adam/F-4246-2013; Perez-Blanco, C. Dionisio/G-4065-2016; Mysiak,
   Jaroslav/A-8683-2019
OI Perez-Blanco, C. Dionisio/0000-0002-7777-4317; Mysiak,
   Jaroslav/0000-0001-9341-7048; santato, silvia/0000-0003-4650-1612
FU Australian Research Council DECRA grant [DE150100328]; 2015-16 UNESCO
   Grants Program; Program for the Attraction of Scientific Talent's SWAN
   (SustainableWatersheds: Emerging Economic Instruments forWater and Food
   Security) Project; Ministerio para la Transicion Ecologica y el Reto
   Demografico, through Fundacion Biodiversidad (ATACC Project-Adaptacion
   Transformativa al Cambio Climatico en el Regadio)
FX Adam Loch's involvement in this research was funded under an Australian
   Research Council DECRA grant (DE150100328) and the 2015-16 UNESCO Grants
   Program. Carlos Dionisio Perez-Blanco's involvement in this research was
   supported by the Program for the Attraction of Scientific Talent's SWAN
   (SustainableWatersheds: Emerging Economic Instruments forWater and Food
   Security) Project, and by the Ministerio para la Transicion Ecologica y
   el Reto Demografico, through Fundacion Biodiversidad (ATACC
   Project-Adaptacion Transformativa al Cambio Climatico en el Regadio).
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NR 56
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 2
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 7
AR 1866
DI 10.3390/w12071866
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA MX4DF
UT WOS:000557672900001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Krvavica, N
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AF Krvavica, Nino
   Ruzic, Igor
TI Assessment of sea-level rise impacts on salt-wedge intrusion in
   idealized and Neretva River Estuary
SO ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Sea level changes; Salt-wedge estuaries; Salinity
   stratification; Two-layer models; Saline intrusion
ID SALINITY INTRUSION; VARIABILITY; SENSITIVITY; FLOW; FIELD; BAY
AB Understanding the response of estuaries to sea-level rise is crucial in developing a suitable mitigation and climate change adaptation strategy. This study investigates the impacts of rising sea levels on salinity intrusion in salt-wedge estuaries. The sea-level rise impacts are assessed in idealized estuaries using simple expressions derived from a two-layer hydraulic theory, and in the Neretva River Estuary in Croatia using a two-layer time-dependent model. The assessment is based on three indicators - the salt-wedge intrusion length, the seawater volume, and the river inflows needed to restore the baseline intrusion. The potential SLR was found to increase all three considered indicators. Theoretical analysis in idealized estuaries suggests that shallower estuaries are more sensitive to SLR. Numerical results for the Neretva River Estuary showed that SLR may increase salt-wedge intrusion length, volume, and corrective river inflow. However, the results are highly non-linear because of the channel geometry, especially for lower river inflows. A theoretical assessment of channel bed slope impacts on limiting a potential intrusion is therefore additionally discussed. This findings emphasize the need to use several different indicators when assessing SLR impacts.
C1 [Krvavica, Nino; Ruzic, Igor] Univ Rijeka, Fac Civil Engn, Radmile Matejc 3, Rijeka 51000, Croatia.
C3 University of Rijeka
RP Krvavica, N (corresponding author), Univ Rijeka, Fac Civil Engn, Radmile Matejc 3, Rijeka 51000, Croatia.
EM nino.krvavica@uniri.hr
RI Ružić, Igor/R-9045-2018; Krvavica, Nino/N-7912-2018
OI Krvavica, Nino/0000-0001-5014-5476
FU University of Rijeka, Croatia [17.06.2.1.02, UNIRI-TECHNIC-18-54]
FX This research was supported by the University of Rijeka, Croatia, grant
   number 17.06.2.1.02 "Sea and river interaction in the context of climate
   change" and UNIRI-TECHNIC-18-54 "Hydrology of Water Resources and
   Identification of Risks from Floods and Mud Flows in Karst".
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NR 54
TC 38
Z9 40
U1 5
U2 32
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0272-7714
EI 1096-0015
J9 ESTUAR COAST SHELF S
JI Estuar. Coast. Shelf Sci.
PD MAR 5
PY 2020
VL 234
AR 106638
DI 10.1016/j.ecss.2020.106638
PG 13
WC Marine & Freshwater Biology; Oceanography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Marine & Freshwater Biology; Oceanography
GA KW9PJ
UT WOS:000521515300004
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kanyenji, GM
   Oluoch-Kosura, W
   Onyango, CM
   Ng'ang'a, SK
AF Kanyenji, George Magambo
   Oluoch-Kosura, Willis
   Onyango, Cecilia Moraa
   Ng'ang'a, Stanley Karanja
TI Prospects and constraints in smallholder farmers' adoption of multiple
   soil carbon enhancing practices in Western Kenya
SO HELIYON
LA English
DT Article
DE Agriculture; Environmental science; Economics; Agricultural economics;
   Agricultural policy; Agricultural soil science; Agricultural technology;
   Environmental economics; Soil fertility; Soil organic carbon; Carbon
   sequestration; Generalized ordered logit; Multivariate probit
ID SUSTAINABLE AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION;
   CONSERVATION AGRICULTURE; FERTILITY MANAGEMENT; SYSTEMS; MANURE;
   SEQUESTRATION; PROFITABILITY; PRODUCTIVITY; AFRICA
AB Most smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) are adversely affected by low soil fertility, land degradation and climate change-related shocks such as drought. These problems lead to low productivity and low household income. In addition, the adoption of soil carbon enhancing practices remains low in Western Kenya. This study analyses the factors that influence the probability and extent of adoption of soil carbon enhancing practices in Western Kenya utilizing plot-level information, socioeconomic characteristics and external supporting factors. Multivariate probit model and generalized ordered logit were utilized to assess the adoption of multiple soil carbon enhancing practices and the extent of adoption respectively. Results indicate that the adoption of soil carbon enhancing practices is correlated, suggesting interrelation in farmers' adoption decisions. Both the multivariate probit model and generalized ordered probit results indicate that the probability and extent of adoption of soil carbon enhancing practices are influenced by plot-level characteristics, literacy level, access to agricultural credit, agricultural group membership, participation in the market, and gender of the household.
C1 [Kanyenji, George Magambo; Oluoch-Kosura, Willis] Univ Nairobi, Dept Agr Econ, POB 29053-00625, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Onyango, Cecilia Moraa] Univ Nairobi, Dept Plant Sci & Crop Protect, POB 29053-00625, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Ng'ang'a, Stanley Karanja] Int Ctr Trop Agr, POB 6247, Kampala, Uganda.
C3 University of Nairobi; University of Nairobi; Alliance; International
   Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT
RP Kanyenji, GM (corresponding author), Univ Nairobi, Dept Agr Econ, POB 29053-00625, Nairobi, Kenya.
EM geomagambo@gmail.com
RI Karanja, Stanley/AAI-4188-2021
OI Kanyenji, George/0000-0002-8868-2143
FU Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ/GTZ)
   through the CGIAR Research Programs on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE)
   [16.7860.6e001.00, 81206681]
FX This work was supported by the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation
   and Development (BMZ/GTZ -Project No. 16.7860.6e001.00; Contract No.
   81206681) through the CGIAR Research Programs on Water, Land and
   Ecosystems (WLE) to scale up carbon enhancement interventions for food
   security and climate across complex landscapes in Kenya and Ethiopia.
   The funding body played no role in the design of the study and
   collection, analysis, and interpretation of data and in the writing of
   this manuscript.
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NR 49
TC 34
Z9 35
U1 0
U2 30
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
EI 2405-8440
J9 HELIYON
JI Heliyon
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 6
IS 3
AR e03226
DI 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e03226
PG 10
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA KY2SL
UT WOS:000522422500001
PM 32195381
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Klenk, N
AF Klenk, Nicole
TI From network to meshwork: Becoming attuned to difference in
   transdisciplinary environmental research encounters
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Co-production; Politics of knowledge production; Public engagement in
   science; Research practices; Research evaluation; Research impacts
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; COLLABORATION; SCIENCE; DYNAMICS; SUSTAINABILITY;
   MANAGEMENT; PROGRAMS; SYSTEMS
AB Transdisciplinary research has been promoted as a means of bringing together certified experts and stakeholders to produce knowledge that is policy-relevant, salient, credible, and legitimate to inform decision-making about complex problems. In this article I discuss the limitations of using the 'network' metaphor in transdisciplinary research practice and propose the use of a different metaphor to make transdisciplinary research encounters more attuned to difference. This research is informed by Tim Ingold's use of 'meshwork' as a metaphor for how life is lived along lines of becoming: emergent, indeterminate, contingent, historical, narrative. In this paper, my objective is to explain and illustrate by way of an example of a transdisciplinary climate change adaptation project the need for a new metaphor to convey the open-endedness of transdisciplinary research where subject positions are not conceived in advance of a research encounter, such as in the 'network' metaphor, but erupt in the interstices of research methods, objectives and desired outcomes. The meshwork metaphor implies that transdisciplinarity should be reframed as a practice of attunement to difference, becoming skilled in paying attention, witnessing, and responding to differences.
C1 [Klenk, Nicole] Univ Toronto Scarborough, Scarborough, ON, Canada.
C3 University of Toronto; University Toronto Scarborough
RP Klenk, N (corresponding author), Univ Toronto Scarborough, Scarborough, ON, Canada.
EM Nicole.klenk@utoronto.ca
RI Klenk, Nicole/ABF-8239-2020
OI Klenk, Nicole Lisa/0000-0001-8224-6992
FU Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
FX This research was funded by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research
   Council Partnership Development Grant: Living with Climate Change
   (2013-2015) and by a Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
   Insight Development Grant: Transdisciplinary Science-Policy Interfaces
   in Climate Change Adaptation Decision-Making (2017-2019). I would like
   to give my sincere thanks to Kim Reeder for providing comments and
   suggestions on a previous version of this manuscript. Thank you to the
   participants of the CCCVA and to those who agreed to be interviewed. I
   would also like to give thanks to April Brust for her artistic rendering
   of meshwork.
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NR 65
TC 24
Z9 25
U1 0
U2 16
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD NOV
PY 2018
VL 89
BP 315
EP 321
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.08.007
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GX2OB
UT WOS:000447557600032
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schiek, B
   González, C
   Mwendia, S
   Prager, SD
AF Schiek, Ben
   Gonzalez, Carlos
   Mwendia, Solomon
   Prager, Steven D.
TI Got forages? Understanding potential returns on investment in
   <i>Brachiaria</i> spp. for dairy producers in Eastern Africa
SO TROPICAL GRASSLANDS-FORRAJES TROPICALES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; ex-ante impact assessment; producer surplus;
   tropical forages
ID LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION; PASTURES; GRASSES
AB Production of livestock and dairy products in Sub-Saharan Africa struggles to keep pace with growing demand. The potential exists to close this gap in a climate-friendly way through the introduction of improved forage varieties of the Brachiaria genus. We assess the potential economic impact of the development and release of such varieties in 6 Eastern African countries using an economic surplus model. Results are presented across a range of potential scenarios involving different adoption rates and percentage increases in production. For all but the lowest levels of adoption and production increases, improved forages have the potential for positive return on investment. Using these results, we present formulae that help readers calculate the adoption rate or percentage increase in production necessary to achieve specific desired levels of net benefit. Overall, the model output suggests that investment in a forages research program related to the qualities of the forage itself as well as programs to enhance dissemination and adoption of new materials would be low risk and have high likelihood for positive outcomes, generating discounted net benefits in the order of multiple tens of millions of dollars over a 30-year time horizon.
C1 [Schiek, Ben; Gonzalez, Carlos; Prager, Steven D.] Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Decis & Policy Anal Area, Cali, Colombia.
   [Mwendia, Solomon] Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Agrobiodivers Res Area, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 Alliance; International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT;
   Alliance; International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT
RP Schiek, B (corresponding author), Int Ctr Trop Agr CIAT, Apartado Aereo 6713, Cali, Colombia.
EM b.schiek@cgiar.org
RI Prager, Steven/ABD-2092-2020
OI Schiek, Benjamin/0000-0002-2933-793X
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NR 27
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 1
PU CENTRO INT AGRICULTURA TROPICAL-CIAT
PI VALLE DEL CAUCA
PA A A 6713, KM 17 RECTA CALI-PALMIRA, CALI,, VALLE DEL CAUCA, 00000,
   COLOMBIA
SN 2346-3775
J9 TROP GRASSL-FORRAJES
JI Trop. Grassl.-Forrajes Trop.
PD SEP
PY 2018
VL 6
IS 3
BP 117
EP 133
DI 10.17138/TGFT(6)117-133
PG 17
WC Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science; Agronomy; Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Plant Sciences
GA GV2TH
UT WOS:000445943600001
OA Green Submitted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ojea, E
   Pearlman, I
   Gaines, SD
   Lester, SE
AF Ojea, Elena
   Pearlman, Isaac
   Gaines, Steven D.
   Lester, Sarah E.
TI Fisheries regulatory regimes and resilience to climate change
SO AMBIO
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Fisheries systems; Resilience;
   Socio-ecological systems
ID SOCIAL-ECOLOGICAL SYSTEMS; TERRITORIAL USER RIGHTS; PROPERTY-RIGHTS;
   RESOURCE-MANAGEMENT; MARINE FISHERIES; CHANGE IMPACTS; CATCH SHARES;
   ADAPTATION; CONSERVATION; VARIABILITY
AB Climate change is already producing ecological, social, and economic impacts on fisheries, and these effects are expected to increase in frequency and magnitude in the future. Fisheries governance and regulations can alter socio-ecological resilience to climate change impacts via harvest control rules and incentives driving fisher behavior, yet there are no syntheses or conceptual frameworks for examining how institutions and their regulatory approaches can alter fisheries resilience to climate change. We identify nine key climate resilience criteria for fisheries socio-ecological systems (SES), defining resilience as the ability of the coupled system of interacting social and ecological components (i.e., the SES) to absorb change while avoiding transformation into a different undesirable state. We then evaluate the capacity of four fisheries regulatory systems that vary in their degree of property rights, including open access, limited entry, and two types of rights-based management, to increase or inhibit resilience. Our exploratory assessment of evidence in the literature suggests that these regulatory regimes vary widely in their ability to promote resilient fisheries, with rights-based approaches appearing to offer more resilience benefits in many cases, but detailed characteristics of the regulatory instruments are fundamental.
C1 [Ojea, Elena] Univ Vigo, Future Oceans Lab, Edificio Torre CACTI,Campus Univ, Vigo 36310, Spain.
   [Ojea, Elena] Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Bilbao, Spain.
   [Pearlman, Isaac; Gaines, Steven D.] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Bren Sch Environm Sci & Management, 2400 Bren Hall, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA.
   [Lester, Sarah E.] Florida State Univ, Dept Geog, Bellamy Bldg, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA.
C3 Universidade de Vigo; Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); University
   of California System; University of California Santa Barbara; State
   University System of Florida; Florida State University
RP Ojea, E (corresponding author), Univ Vigo, Future Oceans Lab, Edificio Torre CACTI,Campus Univ, Vigo 36310, Spain.; Ojea, E (corresponding author), Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Bilbao, Spain.
EM elenaojea@uvigo.es; isaac.pearlman@gmail.com; gaines@bren.ucsb.edu;
   slester@fsu.edu
RI Gaines, Steven/Y-3234-2019; ojea, elena/D-3709-2018
OI Gaines, Steven/0000-0002-7604-3483; ojea, elena/0000-0003-4991-8077
FU Basque Government; European Research Council under the European Horizon
   2020 Program / ERC [679812]; Waitt Foundation; European Research Council
   (ERC) [679812] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)
FX E. Ojea thanks Dr. Laura E. Dee for her very helpful comments on the
   manuscript, and acknowledges the Basque Government for financial support
   through the Bizkaia Xede Mobility Grant and has also received funding
   from the European Research Council under the European Horizon 2020
   Program / ERC Starting Grant Agreement n. 679812. S. Gaines and S.
   Lester acknowledge the Waitt Foundation for financial support.
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NR 105
TC 56
Z9 63
U1 2
U2 66
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0044-7447
EI 1654-7209
J9 AMBIO
JI Ambio
PD MAY
PY 2017
VL 46
IS 4
BP 399
EP 412
DI 10.1007/s13280-016-0850-1
PG 14
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ES0PN
UT WOS:000399228700002
PM 27854068
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Nyamwaro, SO
   Wamae, DK
   Kwena, K
   Esilaba, AO
   Ndegwa, W
   Matere, SJ
   Wasswa, KJ
   Ruttoh, R
   Kibue, AM
AF Nyamwaro, S. O.
   Wamae, D. K.
   Kwena, K.
   Esilaba, A. O.
   Ndegwa, W.
   Matere, S. J.
   Wasswa, K. J.
   Ruttoh, R.
   Kibue, A. M.
BE Filho, WL
   Esilaba, AO
   Rao, KPC
   Sridhar, G
TI Situation Analysis of Climate Change Aspects in Kenya
SO ADAPTING AFRICAN AGRICULTURE TO CLIMATE CHANGE: TRANSFORMING RURAL
   LIVELIHOODS
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Conference on Transforming Rural Livelihoods in Africa - How Can Land
   and Water Management Contribute to Enhanced Food Security and Address
   Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
CY OCT 20-25, 2013
CL Nakuru, KENYA
SP Soil Sci Soc E Africa, African Soil Sci Soc
DE Climate change adaptations; Mitigation; Capacity building; Situation
   analysis
AB Given that climate change and variability have become one of the greatest threats to food security and livelihoods, a baseline study and some literature synthesis were conducted to understand the current situation of CC scenarios in Kenya. The study sought to determine the current status of CC projects that have been undertaken in Kenya in the past five years. Major CC themes and sensitive productive sectors to CC were conceptualized in which the study was based. The baseline survey targeted key informants in academic, research and policy arenas. It was observed that adaptation, mitigation and capacity building accounted for 60, 17 and 23 % of the projects sampled. Agricultural sector (crops) accounted for most of CC projects, accounting for 36 % as well as 40 % of all projects on adaptation. Agriculture, livestock and environment sectors accounted for 30 % each of the mitigation projects. It is established that most projects undertaken in Kenya on CC arena have been on adaptation, capacity building and mitigation. CC projects undertaken in Kenya were in agriculture and livestock sectors. Although considerable efforts appear to have been put in adaptation to CC, more needs to be done, especially in agriculture and water sectors, which are important in Kenya's economy.
C1 [Nyamwaro, S. O.; Wamae, D. K.] KARI Muguga North, POB 032-00902, Kikuyu, Kenya.
   [Kwena, K.; Ruttoh, R.] KARI Katumani, Machakos, Kenya.
   [Esilaba, A. O.] KARI Headquarters, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Ndegwa, W.; Kibue, A. M.] Kenya Meteorol Dept, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Matere, S. J.] KARI Muguga South, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Wasswa, K. J.] Minist Agr, Nairobi, Kenya.
RP Nyamwaro, SO (corresponding author), KARI Muguga North, POB 032-00902, Kikuyu, Kenya.
EM snyamwaro344@gmail.com
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NR 24
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 10
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-13000-2; 978-3-319-12999-0
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2015
BP 43
EP 52
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-13000-2_4
PG 10
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Agriculture, Multidisciplinary;
   Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BF2JL
UT WOS:000380473000004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mukherjee, I
   Sovacool, BK
AF Mukherjee, Ishani
   Sovacool, Benjamin K.
TI Sustainability principles of the Asian Development Bank's (ADB's) energy
   policy: An opportunity for greater future synergies
SO RENEWABLE ENERGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Asian Development Bank; Energy sustainability; Energy poverty; Renewable
   energy; Energy efficiency; Access
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; BIOMASS
AB This study examines a sample of three Asian Development Bank (ADB) energy projects to determine how they holistically address the energy sector challenges of the region. The paper firstly establishes four fundamental social and environmental sustainability principles that have influenced ADB's new energy policy. These are (1) improving energy efficiency; (2) promoting renewable energy; (3) reducing energy poverty; and (4) enhancing climate change adaptation. These inform the policy's new four-fold implementation strategy of scaling up renewable energy, advocating efficiency, enhancing energy access to benefit livelihoods and improving energy sector governance. The study then investigates the historical genesis, drivers, and advantages and challenges facing three recent ADB energy projects: a $76.75 million biomass power plant in Thailand, a $32.6 million energy efficiency initiative in the Philippines, and a $153.5 million program for off-grid renewables in Vietnam. The final part of the study evaluates each of these cases based on how they embody each of the four sustainability principles that uphold the new energy policy. The paper concludes by distilling lessons and presenting general recommendations for planners at the ADB and in Asia more generally. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Mukherjee, Ishani; Sovacool, Benjamin K.] Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, Singapore 259772, Singapore.
C3 National University of Singapore
RP Mukherjee, I (corresponding author), Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, 469C Bukit Timah Rd, Singapore 259772, Singapore.
EM ishani@nus.edu.sg; sovacool@vt.edu
RI Mukherjee, Ishani/AAE-3694-2021; Sovacool, Benjamin/Y-2392-2019
OI Sovacool, Benjamin/0000-0002-4794-9403; Mukherjee,
   Ishani/0000-0002-1889-858X
CR ADB, 2008, EN ALL IN
   *ADB, 2009, EN OUTL AS PAC
   ADB, 2008, THAIL BIOM POW PROJ
   ADB, 2008, ENERGY POLICY
   ADB, 2009, CLIM CHANG ADB PROGR
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   [Anonymous], ENERGY POLICY
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   Asian Development Bank (ADB), 2009, PROP LOAN ADM GRANT
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NR 34
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 33
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0960-1481
J9 RENEW ENERG
JI Renew. Energy
PD DEC
PY 2012
VL 48
BP 173
EP 182
DI 10.1016/j.renene.2012.04.053
PG 10
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Energy & Fuels
GA 987PL
UT WOS:000307429500021
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Valpreda, E
AF Valpreda, Edi
BE Filho, WL
TI Climate Change along Italian Coasts: Consciousness for Actions
SO ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ELEMENTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 2nd Worlds Oline Climate Change Conference (Climate 2009)
CY NOV 02-06, 2009
CL ELECTR NETWORK
DE Adaptation; Coast; ICZM; Italy; Land use; Planning; Risk; Sprawling
AB Starting from some key outcomes of the first agreement on the Protocol on ICZM (Integrated Coastal Zone Management) in the Mediterranean Region recently signed in Madrid, the paper seeks to contribute to an evaluation of what the application of climate change adaptation policies along Italian coasts really could mean.
   This research aims to provide a concrete comparison between the present coastal land use and substantive obligations stated in the Protocol. Among these, we have mainly considered building limitations in an area of at least one hundred metres from the sea. In this context, the paper analyses the present land use and its spatial features regarding the coastal vulnerability to climate change and the feasibility of adaptation strategies.
   An index-based evaluation of the aptness of application of the Protocol along Italian coasts has been prepared, showing substantial differences in regional potential.
   The research presents methods to select zones where the Protocol could be applied and used to consider non-standard solutions, such as converting the impact of the railways into a coastal protection perspective.
   This study intends to offer a concrete stimulus for a national coastal adaptation programme that is still lacking in Italy, suggesting innovative methods for a national comparison of regional particularities regarding coastal adaptation.
C1 [Valpreda, Edi] ENEA, I-40128 Bologna, Italy.
C3 Italian National Agency New Technical Energy & Sustainable Economics
   Development
EM valpreda@enea.it
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   [Anonymous], 2010, MANAGEMENT ENERGY AI
   [Anonymous], 2005, 362005 APAT
   Battisti C, 2007, FRAMMENTAZIIONE CONN
   CAPUTO C, 1991, Z GEOMORPHOL S, V0081, P00031
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   European Commission, 2007, COM20070354 EUR COMM
   European Commission, 2009, SEC2009386, P386
   Forman R.T. T., 1995, Land Mosaics: The Ecology of Landscapes and Regions, Cambridge
   Plan Bleu, 2005, 159 MAP
NR 10
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-642-14775-3
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2011
BP 575
EP 588
DI 10.1007/978-3-642-14776-0_35
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BYI54
UT WOS:000298933100035
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sánchez-Castro, D
   Perrier, A
   Willi, Y
AF Sanchez-Castro, Dario
   Perrier, Antoine
   Willi, Yvonne
TI Reduced climate adaptation at range edges in North American
   <i>Arabidopsis lyrata</i>
SO GLOBAL ECOLOGY AND BIOGEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; genetic diversity; genetic drift; marginal
   population; niche limit; small population size; transplant experiment
ID LOCAL ADAPTATION; SPECIES RANGE; MATING SYSTEM; EVOLUTION; ECOLOGY;
   POPULATIONS; PERFORMANCE; ABUNDANCE; MARGINS; SHIFTS
AB Aim Species' range limits, when not caused by dispersal limitation, are the result of constraints to the evolution of the ecological niche such that further range expansion is slow or not possible. An important evolutionary constraint at range edges may be the enhanced action of genetic drift. Here we tested whether a history of small population size and enhanced genetic drift was linked with reduced adaptation at range limits. Location Eastern North America. Time period 2017-2019. Taxon Arabidopsis lyrata subsp. lyrata. Methods We performed a latitudinal transplant experiment with sites across and beyond the species' distribution of North American Arabidopsis lyrata. Plants originated from the centre and the periphery, and the latter shared a history of range expansion or long-term isolation and had low genetic diversity. We tested for adaptation by considering climatic variables that had previously been associated with both niche and range limits. Results Multiplicative performance of plants was lower the more different the temperature regime between a transplant site and a home site was, supporting climate adaptation. However, populations performed worse only when conditions were warmer at the transplant sites and better when conditions were colder, indicating that despite divergent adaptation to climate, the species seems to prefer living in cooler areas than where it is found currently. Finally, populations with low genetic diversity had a lower performance under a climate similar to that of their home sites, and performance declined more strongly under warmer conditions. Main conclusions Our study provides evidence that genetic drift reduces adaptation at species' range limits, and that populations with a history of genetic drift are especially vulnerable under global warming.
C1 [Sanchez-Castro, Dario; Perrier, Antoine; Willi, Yvonne] Univ Basel, Dept Environm Sci, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland.
C3 University of Basel
RP Sánchez-Castro, D (corresponding author), Univ Basel, Dept Environm Sci, CH-4056 Basel, Switzerland.
EM dario.sancast@gmail.com
RI PERRIER, Antoine/HHC-7812-2022
OI SANCHEZ-CASTRO, DARIO/0000-0002-2552-1692; PERRIER,
   Antoine/0000-0002-6447-5692
FU Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen
   Forschung [31003A_166322]
FX Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen
   Forschung, Grant/Award Number: 31003A_166322
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NR 48
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 17
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1466-822X
EI 1466-8238
J9 GLOBAL ECOL BIOGEOGR
JI Glob. Ecol. Biogeogr.
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 31
IS 6
BP 1066
EP 1077
DI 10.1111/geb.13483
EA MAR 2022
PG 12
WC Ecology; Geography, Physical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography
GA 0Y7QB
UT WOS:000765887800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU De la Torre, AR
   Wilhite, B
   Neale, DB
AF De la Torre, Amanda R.
   Wilhite, Benjamin
   Neale, David B.
TI Environmental Genome-Wide Association Reveals Climate Adaptation Is
   Shaped by Subtle to Moderate Allele Frequency Shifts in Loblolly Pine
SO GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
LA English
DT Article
DE GEA; loblolly pine; climate adaptation; ultradense linkage map
ID QUANTITATIVE TRAIT LOCI; R-PACKAGE; POPULATION-STRUCTURE; LINKED
   SELECTION; CANDIDATE GENES; SOFT SWEEPS; TAEDA L.; MAP; EVOLUTION;
   GENETICS
AB Understanding the genomic basis of local adaptation is crucial to determine the potential of long-lived woody species to withstand changes in their natural environment. In the past, efforts to dissect the genomic architecture in gymnosperms species have been limited due to the absence of reference genomes. Recently, the genomes of some commercially important conifers, such as loblolly pine, have become available, allowing whole-genome studies of these species. In this study, we test for associations between 87k SNPs, obtained from whole-genome resequencing of loblolly pine individuals, and 270 environmental variables and combinations of them. We determine the geographic location of significant loci and identify their genomic location using our newly constructed ultradense 26k SNP linkage map. We found that water availability is the main climatic variable shaping local adaptation of the species, and found 821 SNPs showing significant associations with climatic variables or combinations of them based on the consistent results of three different genotype environment association methods. Our results suggest that adaptation to climate in the species might have occurred by many changes in the frequency of alleleswith moderate to small effect sizes, and bythe smaller contribution of large effect alleles in genes related to moisture deficit, temperature and precipitation. Genomic regions of low recombination and high population differentiation harbored SNPs associated with groups of environmental variables, suggesting climate adaptation might have evolved as a result of different selection pressures acting on groups of genes associated with an aspect of climate rather than on individual environmental variables.
C1 [De la Torre, Amanda R.; Wilhite, Benjamin] No Arizona Univ, Sch Forestry, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 USA.
   [Neale, David B.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Plant Sci, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
C3 Northern Arizona University; University of California System; University
   of California Davis
RP De la Torre, AR (corresponding author), No Arizona Univ, Sch Forestry, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 USA.
EM Amanda.de-la-torre@nau.edu
OI De La Torre, Amanda/0000-0001-6647-723X
FU U.S. Department of Agriculture/National Institute of Food and
   Agriculture [McIntire Stennis project] [1020440, 201167009-30030]
FX This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture/National
   Institute of Food and Agriculture [McIntire Stennis project 1020440]
   awarded to A.D.L.T at Northern Arizona University, and by [grant number
   201167009-30030] awarded to D.B.N at the University of California,
   Davis. The authors would like to thank Chuck Burdine, Patrick Cumbie,
   and Dana Nelson for sample collection; and members of the Neale's Lab
   AnnaritaMarrano, Sara Montanari, and Pedro Martinez for suggestions on
   linkage mapping.
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NR 73
TC 43
Z9 48
U1 4
U2 31
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 1759-6653
J9 GENOME BIOL EVOL
JI Genome Biol. Evol.
PD OCT
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 10
BP 2976
EP 2989
DI 10.1093/gbe/evz220
PG 14
WC Evolutionary Biology; Genetics & Heredity
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Evolutionary Biology; Genetics & Heredity
GA JY5IJ
UT WOS:000504448300024
PM 31599932
OA Green Published, gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Stansfield, E
   Mitteroecker, P
   Vasilyev, SY
   Vasilyev, S
   Butaric, LN
AF Stansfield, Ekaterina
   Mitteroecker, Philipp
   Vasilyev, Sergey Y.
   Vasilyev, Sergey
   Butaric, Lauren N.
TI Respiratory adaptation to climate in modern humans and Upper
   Palaeolithic individuals from Sungir and Mlade
SO SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
ID MAXILLARY SINUS; NASAL CAVITY; MIDFACIAL MORPHOLOGY; POPULATION HISTORY;
   SUB-SAHARAN; EUROPE; FORM; NEANDERTHALS; SELECTION; DISTANCE
AB As our human ancestors migrated into Eurasia, they faced a considerably harsher climate, but the extent to which human cranial morphology has adapted to this climate is still debated. In particular, it remains unclear when such facial adaptations arose in human populations. Here, we explore climate-associated features of face shape in a worldwide modern human sample using 3D geometric morphometrics and a novel application of reduced rank regression. Based on these data, we assess climate adaptations in two crucial Upper Palaeolithic human fossils, Sungir and Mlade, associated with a boreal-to-temperate climate. We found several aspects of facial shape, especially the relative dimensions of the external nose, internal nose and maxillary sinuses, that are strongly associated with temperature and humidity, even after accounting for autocorrelation due to geographical proximity of populations. For these features, both fossils revealed adaptations to a dry environment, with Sungir being strongly associated with cold temperatures and Mlade with warm-to-hot temperatures. These results suggest relatively quick adaptative rates of facial morphology in Upper Palaeolithic Europe.
C1 [Stansfield, Ekaterina; Mitteroecker, Philipp] Univ Vienna, Dept Evolutionary Biol, Unit Theoret Biol, Althanstr 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.
   [Vasilyev, Sergey Y.] Moscow State Univ Med & Dent, Moscow, Russia.
   [Vasilyev, Sergey] Inst Anthropol & Ethnog, Moscow, Russia.
   [Butaric, Lauren N.] Des Moines Univ, Coll Osteopath Med, Dept Anat, Des Moines, IA USA.
C3 University of Vienna; Moscow State University of Medicine & Dentistry
RP Stansfield, E (corresponding author), Univ Vienna, Dept Evolutionary Biol, Unit Theoret Biol, Althanstr 14, A-1090 Vienna, Austria.
EM katya.stansfield@gmail.com
RI Vasilyev, Sergey/L-4870-2015; Mitteroecker, Philipp/A-1591-2012;
   Stansfield, Ekaterina/AAH-7629-2020; Butaric, Lauren/AFM-9174-2022
OI Stansfield, Ekaterina/0000-0001-8548-0995; Butaric,
   Lauren/0000-0003-3743-2408
FU Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation
   [075-15-2020-910]; Austrian Science Fund (FWF) [M 2772-B]
FX The authors would like to thank the various institutions and archives
   that house the cranial collections and/or CT scans utilized here, and
   the curators and researchers who have permitted and facilitated access
   to them. L Butaric would specifically like to thank L Copes for access
   to the Inuits of Tigara Village & Mongolian CT scans (which can be
   accessed at www.lynncopes.com); G Garcia of the American Museum of
   Natural History and P Som at Mt Sinai Radiology Department; J Monge and
   T Schoenemann of the Open Research Scan Archive; D van Gerven and A
   Lawrence of Colorado University-Boulder and R Karki of Anschutz Medical
   Campus at the University of Colorado-Denver; and D Hunt and B Frohlich
   of the Smithsonian Institute. The article was prepared in the framework
   of a research grant funded by the Ministry of Science and Higher
   Education of the Russian Federation (grant ID: 075-15-2020-910) to S.V.
   and supported by the Austrian Science Fund (FWF) (grant ID: M 2772-B) to
   E.S. For the purpose of open access, the first author has applied a CC
   BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version
   arising from this submission.
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NR 87
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 1
U2 3
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2045-2322
J9 SCI REP-UK
JI Sci Rep
PD APR 12
PY 2021
VL 11
IS 1
AR 7997
DI 10.1038/s41598-021-86830-x
PG 13
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA RN6AP
UT WOS:000640434400130
PM 33846400
OA Green Published, Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Albizua, A
   Rahman, HMT
   Corbera, E
   Pascual, U
AF Albizua, Amaia
   Rahman, H. M. Tuihedur
   Corbera, Esteve
   Pascual, Unai
TI Rural livelihoods displacement and mal-adaptation due to large-scale
   modern irrigation in Navarre, Spain
SO ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Agricultural intensification; Irrigation; Livelihoods; Sustainability;
   Climate change; Navarre
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; AGRICULTURAL INTENSIFICATION; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; LAND;
   SUSTAINABILITY; ECONOMY; CONTEXT; POLICY
AB The introduction and expansion of large-scale modern irrigation technology is often justified on the grounds of agricultural productivity and, more recently, climate change adaptation. However, the impacts of its accompanying process of agricultural intensification are seldom analysed from a social-ecological lens. Here we explore the effects of a large-scale modern irrigation (LSMI) project on farming livelihoods in Navarre, Spain. We identify farmers' main livelihood and land management strategies to show how they are affected by the adoption of LSMI technology. We show that the development of the LSMI project contributes to change farm management practices in ways that simplify cropping patterns while displacing some farmers towards drylands and forcing others to sell their arable lands. Furthermore, we suggest that the LSMI project adopters may become more sensitive to climate change in the long term. In light of these findings, we argue that LSMI projects, and irrigation policy more broadly, may be inadvertently eroding traditional and less intensive small-scale farming while contributing to land accumulation by large-scale and pro-intensification farmers. These processes may be sowing the seeds of future rural vulnerabilities under accelerating climate change.
C1 [Albizua, Amaia] Univ Basque Country, Dept Geog Prehist & Arqueol, C Tomas & Valiente S-N, Vitoria 01006, Spain.
   [Albizua, Amaia; Pascual, Unai] Univ Basque Country, Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Sede Bldg 1,1st Floor, Leioa 48940, Spain.
   [Rahman, H. M. Tuihedur] Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, 51 Campus Dr, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A8, Canada.
   [Rahman, H. M. Tuihedur] St Marys Univ, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, 923 Robie St, Halifax, NS B3H 3C3, Canada.
   [Corbera, Esteve] Univ Autonoma Barcelona, Dept Geog, Bellaterra 08193, Spain.
   [Corbera, Esteve] Passeig Lluis Co, Inst Catalana Recerca & Estudis Avancats ICREA, Barcelona 08010, Spain.
   [Pascual, Unai] Basque Sci Fdn, Ikerbasque, Maria Diaz Haro 3, Bilbao 48013, Spain.
   [Pascual, Unai] Univ Bern, Ctr Dev & Environm, Bern, Switzerland.
C3 University of Basque Country; Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3);
   University of Basque Country; University of Saskatchewan; Saint Marys
   University - Canada; Autonomous University of Barcelona; ICREA; Basque
   Foundation for Science; University of Bern
RP Albizua, A (corresponding author), Univ Basque Country, Dept Geog Prehist & Arqueol, C Tomas & Valiente S-N, Vitoria 01006, Spain.; Albizua, A (corresponding author), Univ Basque Country, Basque Ctr Climate Change BC3, Sede Bldg 1,1st Floor, Leioa 48940, Spain.
EM amaia.albizua@ehu.eus; hm.rahman@mail.mcgill.ca; esteve.corbera@uab.cat;
   unai.pascual@bc3resarch.org
RI Rahman, H.M./B-4254-2019; Albizua, Amaia/AAA-6326-2019; PASCUAL,
   UNAI/B-4766-2012; Albizua, Amaia/D-4840-2012; Corbera,
   Esteve/C-5368-2015
OI Albizua, Amaia/0000-0001-8381-5288; Corbera, Esteve/0000-0001-7970-4411
FU University of Basque Country
FX First author thanks Open Access funding provided by University of Basque
   Country, and the farmers and landholders of our case study villages for
   their time and willingness to participate in this research. We also
   thank our fieldwork assistants Idoia Urrutia and Julien Brun and
   acknowledge the voluntary support of Julen Ugalde, Begona Renteria and
   Imanol Okin ena during focus groups. This paper is the outcome of a
   research collaboration between the Basque Centrer Climate Change (BC3)
   and the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology (ICTA) ,
   Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona (UAB) . We also acknowledge the useful
   comments of the anonymous reviewers of the article. Jouni Paavola and
   Ciara Raudsepp-Hearne provided valuable comments to an earlier version
   of the manuscript but any mistakes or omissions are the authors' sole
   responsibility.
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NR 77
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 1
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2211-4645
EI 2211-4653
J9 ENVIRON DEV
JI Environ. Dev.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 50
AR 100987
DI 10.1016/j.envdev.2024.100987
EA APR 2024
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SB2I6
UT WOS:001231930800001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Moeletsi, ME
   Tsubo, M
AF Moeletsi, Mokhele E.
   Tsubo, Mitsuru
TI A Move towards Developing Usable Climate Change Adaptation and
   Mitigation Services for the Agricultural Sector
SO CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate services; dryland farming; barriers to the development of
   services; main stages for new service adoption; climate variability
ID GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; USER EXPERIENCE; MODEL HOLOS; LIVESTOCK;
   INFORMATION; OPERATIONS; PROVINCE; TRENDS; WORLD; CROP
AB Dryland farming is at the center of increasing pressure to produce more food for the growing population in an environment that is highly variable and with high expectations for the standard of their production systems. While there is mounting pressure for increased productivity, the responsibility to protect the environment and diminish the agricultural sector's carbon footprint is receiving growing emphasis. Achieving these two goals calls for a consolidated effort to ensure that the scientific community and service providers partner with farmers to create a sustainable food production system that does not harm the environment. In this paper, we studied the nature of the services present in the market and identified ways that could be used to improve the climate services available to the agricultural sector. Important factors that could increase the usability of climate services include coproduction, context-specific information, innovation, demand-driven services, timeliness of services, highly applicable information, provision of services in the correct format, services that increase user experience, specificity of services to a locale, and services that are easily accessible.
C1 [Moeletsi, Mokhele E.] Agr Res Council Nat Resources & Engn, Private Bag X79, ZA-0001 Pretoria, South Africa.
   [Moeletsi, Mokhele E.] Univ Limpopo, Risk & Vulnerabil Assessment Ctr, Private Bag X1106, ZA-0727 Sovenga, South Africa.
   [Moeletsi, Mokhele E.; Tsubo, Mitsuru] Tottori Univ, Arid Land Res Ctr, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
C3 University of Limpopo; Tottori University
RP Moeletsi, ME (corresponding author), Agr Res Council Nat Resources & Engn, Private Bag X79, ZA-0001 Pretoria, South Africa.; Moeletsi, ME (corresponding author), Univ Limpopo, Risk & Vulnerabil Assessment Ctr, Private Bag X1106, ZA-0727 Sovenga, South Africa.; Moeletsi, ME (corresponding author), Tottori Univ, Arid Land Res Ctr, Tottori 6800001, Japan.
EM moeletsim@arc.agric.za; tsubo@tottori-u.ac.jp
RI Tsubo, Mitsuru/C-4027-2016
OI Tsubo, Mitsuru/0000-0002-8729-2215; Moeletsi,
   Mokhele/0000-0003-3932-5569
FU National Research Foundation in South Africa and the Japan Science and
   Technology Agency under their Africa-Japan Collaborative Research
   program
FX We thank Agricultural Research Council colleagues for editing the
   initial paper.
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NR 68
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 2
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2225-1154
J9 CLIMATE
JI Climate
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 12
IS 3
AR 46
DI 10.3390/cli12030046
PG 17
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA ME7O3
UT WOS:001192017500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rahma, A
   Mardiatno, D
   Hizbaron, DR
AF Rahma, Aldila
   Mardiatno, Djati
   Hizbaron, Dyah Rahmawati
TI Developing a theoretical framework: school ecosystem-based disaster risk
   education
SO INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH IN GEOGRAPHICAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Bronfenbrenner's model; disaster risk education; environmental
   education; pentahelix synergy; school ecosystem; theoretical framework
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-EDUCATION; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   RESILIENCE; REDUCTION; KNOWLEDGE; TEACHERS; VULNERABILITY; COMMUNITY;
   SECONDARY
AB Environmental degradation and global disaster encourage the education sector to devise adaptation and mitigation strategies. The scientific approach, from intradisciplinary to interdisciplinary, has urged education into a different array. These narratives provide a context for how disaster risk education must incorporate ecological understanding simultaneously. A semi-systematic literature review identified 29 international journal articles published between 2000 and 2020 that integrated disaster with ecological concepts and their implementation in school programs. These publications, retrieved online from the Universitas Gadjah Mada Library database, created a foundation for comparing the frameworks on which the respective authors had built their research. This study primarily sought to find the gap in theoretical debates and develop a new theoretical framework that systematically addressed it. According to the review's findings, education in climate change adaptation and sustainable development became the primary focus of the discourse. However, it was not implemented holistically but rather separately through disaster risk education or environmental education programs. Accordingly, this study has developed a theoretical framework of school ecosystem-based disaster risk education by adopting the Bronfenbrenner and Pentahelix Synergy models to depict the concepts implemented in the school community.
C1 [Rahma, Aldila] Univ Islam Nusantara, Fac Teacher Training & Educ, Bandung 40286, Indonesia.
   [Mardiatno, Djati; Hizbaron, Dyah Rahmawati] Univ Gadjah Mada, Fac Geog, Dept Environm Geog, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.
C3 Gadjah Mada University
RP Rahma, A (corresponding author), Univ Islam Nusantara, Fac Teacher Training & Educ, Bandung 40286, Indonesia.
EM aldila.rahma@mail.ugm.ac.id
RI Mardiatno, Djati/AFA-5829-2022; Hizbaron, Dyah/GLV-2565-2022; Rahma,
   Aldila/LOS-3355-2024
OI Mardiatno, Djati/0000-0001-7401-1886
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NR 80
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 5
U2 10
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1038-2046
EI 1747-7611
J9 INT RES GEOGR ENVIRO
JI Int. Res. Geogr. Environ. Educ.
PD JAN 2
PY 2024
VL 33
IS 1
BP 6
EP 23
DI 10.1080/10382046.2023.2214041
EA MAY 2023
PG 18
WC Education & Educational Research
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Education & Educational Research
GA HQ4U6
UT WOS:000993507200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU de Magalhaes, RF
   Danilevicz, ADF
   de Souza, JS
   Echeveste, ME
AF de Magalhaes, Ruane Fernandes
   Danilevicz, Angela de Moura Ferreira
   de Souza, Joana Siqueira
   Echeveste, Marcia Elisa
TI The risk management tools?role for urban infrastructure resilience
   building
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change risks; Risk management tools; Resilient urban
   infrastructure planning; Resilient capacity; Urban resilience building
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABILITY; KNOWLEDGE; SYSTEMS; CITIES;
   GOVERNANCE; INDICATORS
AB The climate change effects have become increasingly intense and frequent, impacting the cities' fundamental functions. In this context, resilience-building represents a relevant challenge for urban managers, mainly due to the barriers to integrating diverse infrastructure subsystems at different governance levels. Thus, this study aims to analyze risk management tools' contribution to urban infrastructure services' resilient planning. The research developed risk management tools that were incorporated into the decision-making process of resilient urban planning. The tools were applied to a case study in Porto Alegre, in the south of Brazil, relating characteristics of its infrastructure to operationalization principles of urban resilience in the literature. The results revealed that the risk management tools could promote a comprehensive analysis of the opportunities and threats of the infrastructure network under climate risks, based on the technical experience and engagement of multiple stakeholders in decision making. Local management experiences demonstrate no single way to strengthen resilient characteristics in cities. Instead, the analyses developed supported a greater understanding of the risk management tools' potential for resilient planning, admitting uncertainties in the transition to responsive and adaptive urban ecosystems.
C1 [de Magalhaes, Ruane Fernandes; Echeveste, Marcia Elisa] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Grad Program Ind Engn, Av Osvaldo Aranha 99, BR-90035190 Porto Alegre, Brazil.
   [Danilevicz, Angela de Moura Ferreira; de Souza, Joana Siqueira] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Dept Ind Engn, Av Osvaldo Aranha 99, BR-90035190 Porto Alegre, Brazil.
   [Echeveste, Marcia Elisa] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Inst Math & Stat, Av Bento Goncalves 9500, BR-91509900 Porto Alegre, Brazil.
   [de Magalhaes, Ruane Fernandes] Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Grad Program Ind Engn, Av Osvaldo Aranha 99,5th Floor, BR-90035190 Porto Alegre, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Universidade Federal do Rio
   Grande do Sul; Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul; Universidade
   Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
RP de Magalhaes, RF (corresponding author), Univ Fed Rio Grande do Sul, Grad Program Ind Engn, Av Osvaldo Aranha 99,5th Floor, BR-90035190 Porto Alegre, Brazil.
EM ruane.magalhaes@ufrgs.br
RI de Souza, Joana/IZQ-1291-2023; Fernandes de Magalhaes, Ruane/S-1260-2017
OI Fernandes de Magalhaes, Ruane/0000-0002-7058-1790
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NR 67
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 13
U2 70
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 46
AR 101296
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2022.101296
EA SEP 2022
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 6C1JX
UT WOS:000881779200005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, JH
   Zhang, JJ
   Zhang, P
AF Wang, Jianghao
   Zhang, Junjie
   Zhang, Peng
TI Rising temperature threatens China's cropland
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE weather; climate change; land use; China
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LAND-USE; ECONOMIC-IMPACTS; FOOD SECURITY;
   WEATHER; FLUCTUATIONS; AGRICULTURE; PATTERNS
AB The rising demand for calories and protein together with urbanization, pose significant challenges to China's food security. The determination of policy actions requires accurate estimates of climatic impacts on both crop yields (intensive margin) and cropland area (extensive margin). However, the analysis of the latter has been limited, especially in developing countries. Here, we assess the impact of temperature on land use in China by matching high-resolution satellite data on land use with daily weather data from 1980 to 2010. We find that extremely hot weather (daily average temperature above 30 degrees C) has a long-lasting effect on reducing cropland in China. Combining climate projections from 39 downscaled climate models, we predict that climate change is likely to reduce China's cropland area by 2.09%-25.51% under IPCC's slowest and fastest-warming scenarios by the end of this century. In addition, we find that non-irrigated land is more susceptible to rising temperatures in the short term; however, irrigated land is subject to a similar impact in the long term. This result suggests that the adaptive effect of irrigation could be limited under persistent rising in temperature.
C1 [Wang, Jianghao] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, State Key Lab Resources & Environm Informat Syst, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Junjie] Duke Kunshan Univ, Suzhou, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Junjie] Duke Univ, Durham, NC 27708 USA.
   [Zhang, Peng] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Shenzhen 518172, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS; Duke Kunshan University; Duke University; The
   Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen
RP Zhang, JJ (corresponding author), Duke Kunshan Univ, Suzhou, Peoples R China.; Zhang, JJ (corresponding author), Duke Univ, Durham, NC 27708 USA.; Zhang, P (corresponding author), Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Shenzhen 518172, Peoples R China.
EM junjie.zhang@duke.edu; zhangpeng@cuhk.edu.cn
RI Wang, Jianghao/J-1403-2016
OI Zhang, Junjie/0000-0002-0716-3828
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41971409, 71773043,
   71773062]; Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy
   of Sciences [2020052]
FX This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (Nos. 41971409, 71773043, 71773062), and the Youth Innovation
   Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (No. 2020052).
   The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis,
   decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.
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NR 39
TC 5
Z9 7
U1 3
U2 40
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD AUG 1
PY 2022
VL 17
IS 8
AR 084042
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/ac84f1
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 3T8EP
UT WOS:000840503200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wakhungu, MJ
AF Wakhungu, M. J.
TI An ethnography of policy: water reuse policy in Kenya
SO WATER POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Ethnography of policy; Kenya; Water policy; Water recycling; Water reuse
ID SYSTEMS; FRAMEWORK; OPTIONS
AB Water scarcity and inadequate infrastructure for sanitation are two challenges that are emblematic to Kenya and other developing nations in Sub-Saharan Africa. Under such circumstances, water reuse has the potential to address these challenges but only under a favourable policy environment. In this paper, policy documents were considered as the ethnographic object to understand how people talk about water reuse in Kenya through policies, plans, regulations and guidelines. Using a general inductive approach to content analysis, the findings suggest that Kenya's policy on water reuse has progressed, especially in the recognition of the potential of reused water for addressing water scarcity, pollution, cleaner industrial production, food production, and climate change adaptation and mitigation. While many of the water reuse issues have been discussed under water and irrigation, environment and industrialization, other key sectors such as food and agriculture, housing, urban development and health remain silent on water reuse. Therefore, there is a need to take water reuse conversations beyond the water, environment, and industrialisation sectors if we are to address the water supply and wastewater management issues. Likewise, the study reminds us of the importance of foregrounding public perception and harmonized institutional arrangements in the success of water reuse in the country.
C1 [Wakhungu, M. J.] Univ Nairobi, Univ Way,Harry Thuku Rd,POB 30197, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 University of Nairobi
RP Wakhungu, MJ (corresponding author), Univ Nairobi, Univ Way,Harry Thuku Rd,POB 30197, Nairobi, Kenya.
EM mwakhungu@gmail.com
OI Wakhungu, Mathews/0000-0002-4751-2762
FU University of Nairobi Merit scholarship
FX The support from and discussions with Dr Richard Mulwa and Dr Jones
   Agwata are gratefully acknowledged and their insights greatly improve
   this paper. At the time of the study, I was on a University of Nairobi
   Merit scholarship.
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NR 28
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 31
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 1366-7017
EI 1996-9759
J9 WATER POLICY
JI Water Policy
PD APR
PY 2019
VL 21
IS 2
BP 436
EP 448
DI 10.2166/wp.2019.160
PG 13
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA HU8UU
UT WOS:000465567200014
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Banerjee, O
   Boyle, K
   Rogers, CT
   Cumberbatch, J
   Kanninen, B
   Lemay, M
   Schling, M
AF Banerjee, Onil
   Boyle, Kevin
   Rogers, Cassandra T.
   Cumberbatch, Janice
   Kanninen, Barbara
   Lemay, Michele
   Schling, Maja
TI Estimating benefits of investing in resilience of coastal infrastructure
   in small island developing states: An application to Barbados
SO MARINE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Small island developing states; Climate change vulnerability; Coastal
   resilience; Climate change adaptation; Ex-post impact analysis;
   Ecosystem services; Stated preferences; Contingent valuation; Tourism;
   Coastal infrastructure investment
ID VALUATION; VALUES
AB Small Island Developing States (SIDS) are the least responsible for climate change, though they bear a disproportionate burden in terms of vulnerability to climate-induced disasters. The economies of many SIDS are also highly dependent on tourism, much of which occurs in potentially hazardous coastal areas and are closely linked to environmental quality. Despite the importance of catalyzing investment in coastal infrastructure to reduce vulnerability and enhance resilience, there is a paucity of research exploring the economic returns to investment to substantiate a business case for this investment. This paper addresses this research gap and develops a model for estimating the economic benefits of shoreline stabilization and illustrates the approach with an application to a US$24.2 million coastal infrastructure investment in Barbados. Results show that the investment generated significant benefits for both tourists and residents, as well as reduced beach erosion and property damage. The approach is versatile facing data constraints, provides evidence to support decisions to scale-up existing investments, and can support and inform the design of new investments.
C1 [Banerjee, Onil; Lemay, Michele] Interamer Dev Bank, Environm Rural Dev Environm & Disaster Risk Manag, 1300 New York Ave NW, Washington, DC 20577 USA.
   [Boyle, Kevin] Virginia Tech, 430A Bishop Favrao,1345 Perry St, Blacksburg, VA 24061 USA.
   [Rogers, Cassandra T.] Inter Amer Dev Bank, Environm Rural Dev Environm & Disaster Risk Manag, Maxwell Main Rd, BB-17068 Christchurch, Barbados.
   [Cumberbatch, Janice] Univ West Indies, Ctr Resource Management & Environm Studies CERMES, Cave Hill Campus, Wanstead, Barbados.
   [Kanninen, Barbara] Arlington Publ Sch, 1426N Quincy St, Arlington, VA 22207 USA.
   [Schling, Maja] Interamer Dev Bank, Off Strateg Planning & Dev Effectiveness, 1300 New York Ave NW, Washington, DC 20577 USA.
C3 Inter-American Development Bank; Virginia Polytechnic Institute & State
   University; University West Indies Mona Jamaica; University West Indies
   Cave Hill Campus; Inter-American Development Bank
RP Banerjee, O (corresponding author), Interamer Dev Bank, Environm Rural Dev Environm & Disaster Risk Manag, 1300 New York Ave NW, Washington, DC 20577 USA.
EM obanerjee@gmail.com; kjboyle@vt.edu; cassandrar@iadb.org;
   janice.cumberbatch@cavehill.uwi.edu; barbara.kanninen@apsva.us;
   michelel@iadb.org; majas@iadb.org
RI Boyle, Kevin/HTP-1949-2023
FU Inter-American Development Bank; Barbados' Coastal Zone Management Unit
FX This work was funded by the Inter-American Development Bank. The authors
   are grateful for the support received from Barbados' Coastal Zone
   Management Unit and in particular, that of Mr. Fabian Hinds.
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NR 45
TC 15
Z9 16
U1 1
U2 38
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0308-597X
EI 1872-9460
J9 MAR POLICY
JI Mar. Pol.
PD APR
PY 2018
VL 90
BP 78
EP 87
DI 10.1016/j.marpol.2018.01.004
PG 10
WC Environmental Studies; International Relations
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; International Relations
GA GA1UW
UT WOS:000428103900010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Steurer, R
   Clar, C
AF Steurer, Reinhard
   Clar, Christoph
TI The ambiguity of federalism in climate policy-making: how the political
   system in Austria hinders mitigation and facilitates adaptation
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change mitigation; climate change adaptation; climate policy
   integration; CPI; building policies; flood risk management; federalism;
   environmental federalism; Austria
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-POLICY; INTEGRATION; GOVERNMENT; GOVERNANCE
AB Although the impacts of federalism on environmental policy-making are still contested, many policy analysts emphasise its advantages in climate policy-making. This applies to the mitigation of climate change, in particular when federal governments (as in the U.S.) are inactive. More recently, federalism is also expected to empower sub-national actors in adapting to local impacts of climate change. The present paper analyses the role federalism in Austria played in greening the decentralised building sector (relevant for mitigation) on the one hand, and in improving regional flood risk management (relevant for adaptation) on the other. In line with the so-called matching school of the environmental federalism research strand we conclude that Austrian federalism proved to be more appropriate for regional flood protection than for mitigating climate change. We highlight that it is not federalism per se but federalism embedded in various contextual factors that shape environmental policy-making. Among these factors are the spatial scale of an environmental problem, the nitty-gritty of polity systems, and national politics (such as federal positions on climate change mitigation).
C1 [Steurer, Reinhard; Clar, Christoph] BOKU Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, InFER Inst Forest Environm & Nat Resource Policy, Feistmantelstr 4, A-1180 Vienna, Austria.
C3 BOKU University
RP Steurer, R (corresponding author), BOKU Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, InFER Inst Forest Environm & Nat Resource Policy, Feistmantelstr 4, A-1180 Vienna, Austria.
EM reinhard.steurer@boku.ac.at
FU Austrian Climate Research Programme (ACRP) of the Austrian Climate and
   Energy Fund [K10AC0K00054, KR14AC7K11809, K10AC0K00004]
FX We thank the Austrian Climate Research Programme (ACRP) of the Austrian
   Climate and Energy Fund for financing the following three projects that
   led to this article: (i) CLIP-IN (Project No. K10AC0K00054); (ii)
   Flood-Adapt (Project No. KR14AC7K11809); and (iii) FAMOUS
   (K10AC0K00004).
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NR 75
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 25
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PY 2018
VL 20
IS 2
BP 252
EP 265
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2017.1411253
PG 14
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA FY7QE
UT WOS:000427057000009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rippke, U
   Ramirez-Villegas, J
   Jarvis, A
   Vermeulen, SJ
   Parker, L
   Mer, F
   Diekkrüger, B
   Challinor, AJ
   Howden, M
AF Rippke, Ulrike
   Ramirez-Villegas, Julian
   Jarvis, Andy
   Vermeulen, Sonja J.
   Parker, Louis
   Mer, Flora
   Diekkrueger, Bernd
   Challinor, Andrew J.
   Howden, Mark
TI Timescales of transformational climate change adaptation in sub-Saharan
   African agriculture
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CROP YIELD; RESPONSES; PROJECTIONS; HOTSPOTS; IMPACTS; POVERTY; MAIZE
AB Climate change is projected to constitute a significant threat to food security if no adaptation actions are taken(1,2). Transformation of agricultural systems, for example switching crop types or moving out of agriculture, is projected to be necessary in some cases(3-5). However, little attention has been paid to the timing of these transformations. Here, we develop a temporal uncertainty framework using the CMIP5 ensemble to assess when and where cultivation of key crops in sub-Saharan Africa becomes unviable. We report potential transformational changes for all major crops during the twenty-first century, as climates shift and areas become unsuitable. For most crops, however, transformation is limited to small pockets (<15% of area), and only for beans, maize and banana is transformation more widespread (similar to 30% area for maize and banana, 60% for beans). We envisage three overlapping adaptation phases to enable projected transformational changes: an incremental adaptation phase focused on improvements to crops and management, a preparatory phase that establishes appropriate policies and enabling environments, and a transformational adaptation phase in which farmers substitute crops, explore alternative livelihoods strategies, or relocate. To best align policies with production triggers for no-regret actions, monitoring capacities to track farming systems as well as climate are needed.
C1 [Rippke, Ulrike; Ramirez-Villegas, Julian; Jarvis, Andy; Parker, Louis; Mer, Flora] Int Ctr Trop Agr, Km 17 Recta Cali Palmira, Cali 763537, Colombia.
   [Rippke, Ulrike; Diekkrueger, Bernd] Univ Bonn, Dept Geog, D-53115 Bonn, Germany.
   [Ramirez-Villegas, Julian; Challinor, Andrew J.] Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Inst Climate & Atmospher Sci, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Ramirez-Villegas, Julian; Jarvis, Andy; Vermeulen, Sonja J.; Challinor, Andrew J.] Agr & Food Secur CCAFS, CGIAR Res Program Climate Change, Km 17 Recta Cali Palmira, Cali 763537, Colombia.
   [Vermeulen, Sonja J.] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Plant & Environm Sci, Rolighedsvej 21, DK-1958 Frederiskberg C, Denmark.
   [Howden, Mark] CSIRO Agr, GPO Box 1700, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
   [Howden, Mark] Australian Natl Univ, Climate Change Inst, Canberra, ACT 2600, Australia.
C3 Alliance; International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT;
   University of Bonn; University of Leeds; CGIAR; University of
   Copenhagen; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation
   (CSIRO); Australian National University
RP Ramirez-Villegas, J (corresponding author), Int Ctr Trop Agr, Km 17 Recta Cali Palmira, Cali 763537, Colombia.; Ramirez-Villegas, J (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Inst Climate & Atmospher Sci, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.; Ramirez-Villegas, J (corresponding author), Agr & Food Secur CCAFS, CGIAR Res Program Climate Change, Km 17 Recta Cali Palmira, Cali 763537, Colombia.
EM j.r.villegas@cgiar.org
RI Challinor, Andrew/AAK-3023-2020; Ramirez-Villegas, Julian/AAY-8073-2020;
   Howden, Stuart/C-1138-2008; Jarvis, Andy/K-5516-2013; Diekkruger,
   Bernd/D-9410-2013
OI Ramirez-Villegas, Julian/0000-0002-8044-583X; Howden,
   Stuart/0000-0002-0386-9671; Jarvis, Andy/0000-0001-6543-0798;
   Diekkruger, Bernd/0000-0001-9234-7850
FU CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
   (CCAFS); International Center for Tropical Agriculture (CIAT); CMIP; US
   Department of Energy's Program for Climate Model Diagnosis and
   Intercomparison
FX This study was funded by the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change,
   Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) and by a Young Scientist
   Innovation Grant from the International Center for Tropical Agriculture
   (CIAT) awarded to J.R.-V. We thank the crop experts listed in
   Supplementary Table 3 who kindly provided their feedback on both
   parameter values and suitability simulations. We thank K. Sonder from
   the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) for
   sharing an updated mega-environment data set with us and for providing
   critical feedback on maize parameterizations. U.R. thanks E. Jones from
   CIAT for help on scripting some of the analyses. Authors thank C.
   Navarro and J. Tarapues from CIAT for support with the CMIP5 data, L. P.
   Moreno (CIAT) for her work on improving the EcoCrop model, and A. K.
   Koehler, S. Jennings and S. Whitfield from the University of Leeds for
   insightful comments. We acknowledge the World Climate Research
   Programme's Working Group on Coupled Modeling, which is responsible for
   CMIP, and we thank the climate modelling groups for producing and making
   available their model output (models listed in Supplementary Table 5).
   For CMIP, the US Department of Energy's Program for Climate Model
   Diagnosis and Intercomparison provides coordinating support and led
   development of software infrastructure in partnership with the Global
   Organization for Earth System Science Portals. We thank numerous
   anonymous reviewers for their insightful feedback.
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NR 44
TC 161
Z9 176
U1 5
U2 110
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2016
VL 6
IS 6
BP 605
EP +
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE2947
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DM6ZC
UT WOS:000376500600016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Picketts, IM
   Andrey, J
   Matthews, L
   Déry, SJ
   Tighe, S
AF Picketts, Ian M.
   Andrey, Jean
   Matthews, Lindsay
   Dery, Stephen J.
   Tighe, Susan
TI Climate change adaptation strategies for transportation infrastructure
   in Prince George, Canada
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Local government; Transportation; Road safety; Road
   maintenance; British Columbia
ID BARRIERS; FRAMEWORK; DIALOGUE; WEATHER
AB Transport infrastructure is particularly vulnerable to climate impacts as it is designed for long operational lives, and both episodic and seasonal conditions contribute to deterioration, disruption and unsafe incidents. There are some examples of adaptation in transportation design, but many communities do not have the capacity to incorporate climate change considerations into infrastructure planning and management. Researchers worked closely with the City of Prince George, in Central British Columbia, Canada, to build on existing work and explore how the City could plan, design, and maintain roads and other structures to account for climate change. A local steering committee was formed, and created and evaluated 23 potential research topics. Two focus areas were selected for further investigation and explored during a workshop with practitioners, researchers, consultants and other representatives. The workshop precipitated an investigation of projected impacts of climate change on road maintenance and road safety, and plans to explore alternative paving techniques. Outcomes of the case study provide insights regarding climate change and local transportation infrastructure, including: how researchers can engage with local experts to explore adaptation; issues local governments perceive as important; and barriers communities face as they attempt to address vulnerabilities.
C1 [Picketts, Ian M.] Quest Univ Canada, Div Phys Sci, 3200 Univ Blvd, Squamish, BC V8B 0N8, Canada.
   [Andrey, Jean; Matthews, Lindsay] Univ Waterloo, Geog & Environm Management, 200 Univ Ave West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
   [Dery, Stephen J.] Univ No British Columbia, Environm Sci & Engn, 3333 Univ Way, Prince George, BC V2N 4Z9, Canada.
   [Tighe, Susan] Univ Waterloo, Civil & Environm Engn, 200 Univ Ave West, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo; University of Northern British Columbia;
   University of Waterloo
RP Picketts, IM (corresponding author), Quest Univ Canada, Div Phys Sci, 3200 Univ Blvd, Squamish, BC V8B 0N8, Canada.
EM ian.picketts@questu.ca; jandrey@uwaterloo.ca; l2matthe@uwaterloo.ca;
   stephen.dery@unbc.ca; sltighe@uwaterloo.ca
FU Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions fellowships; University of
   Northern BC; Canada Research Chair program; Natural Resources Canada;
   City of Prince George
FX Thanks to all participants in the transportation study, particularly
   Prince George City staff for their efforts and ongoing commitment to the
   City. Special thanks to Brian Mills (Environment Canada), Dave Dyer
   (City of Prince George) and Chelsea Coady (Fraser Basin Council) for
   their contributions. Ian Picketts' research has been funded by the
   Pacific Institute for Climate Solutions fellowships and the University
   of Northern BC. Drs. Tighe and Dery's positions are supported through
   the Canada Research Chair program. The transportation workshop and
   ongoing adaptation work in Prince George was supported by Natural
   Resources Canada and the City of Prince George. Thanks to reviewers for
   their helpful feedback.
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NR 52
TC 18
Z9 19
U1 3
U2 29
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD APR
PY 2016
VL 16
IS 4
BP 1109
EP 1120
DI 10.1007/s10113-015-0828-8
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DI2FH
UT WOS:000373310600016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ford, JD
   King, D
AF Ford, James D.
   King, Diana
TI A framework for examining adaptation readiness
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Adaptation readiness; Climate change; Adaptive capacity;
   Adaptation tracking; Conceptual model; Assessment framework; Indicators
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; REDUCING VULNERABILITY;
   DECISION-MAKING; POLICY; IMPACTS; BARRIERS; NEED; COMMUNITIES;
   INFORMATION
AB Adaptation readiness is proposed as a complimentary concept to adaptive capacity that captures the strength and existence of governance structures and policy processes which determine whether adaptation takes place. As such, adaptation readiness is concerned with examining actual experiences with planning for adaptation and seeks to characterize whether human systems are prepared and ready to 'do adaptation.' We propose a framework for evaluating readiness, identifying 6 overarching factors essential for adaptation taking place: political leadership, institutional organization, adaptation decision making and stakeholder engagement, availability of usable science, funding for adaptation, and public support for adaptation. For each readiness factor we identify potential indicators, data sources, and considerations for analysis, outlining approaches for quantitative scoring and qualitative examination. We briefly illustrate application of the framework using an example from the territory of Nunavut in the Canadian Arctic, a region projected to experience some of the most dramatic changes in climate globally this century. The framework provides a systematic approach for assessing adaptation readiness, and can be used - in combination with other approaches - to inform the identification and prioritization of adaptation support, guide resources to areas where need is greatest, and serve as a proxy for adaptation tracking.
C1 [Ford, James D.; King, Diana] McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
C3 McGill University
RP Ford, JD (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
EM james.ford@mcgill.ca; Diana.king@mail.mcgill.ca
RI Ford, James/A-4284-2013
OI Ford, James/0000-0002-2066-3456
FU Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada
FX This work was funded by an Insight Development Grant from the Social
   Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. Thanks to Lea
   Berrang-Ford for assistance in preparing the manuscript.
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NR 96
TC 129
Z9 129
U1 2
U2 10
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD APR
PY 2015
VL 20
IS 4
BP 505
EP 526
DI 10.1007/s11027-013-9505-8
PG 22
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CD3QA
UT WOS:000350993100002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Stockport, B
   Yang, P
   Kimani, J
   Leonard, A
   Hirmer, S
AF Stockport, Beatrice
   Yang, Pu
   Kimani, James
   Leonard, Alycia
   Hirmer, Stephanie
TI Climate Change Adaptation, Social Resilience, and Perceived Values Data
   from Turkana, Machakos and Narok Counties, Kenya
SO DATA IN BRIEF
LA English
DT Article
DE Energy planning; Infrastructure planning; Sustainable development;
   Socioeconomic status; LMICs; Community needs; Climate shocks; Drought
AB This dataset provides socioeconomic and value perception interview data collected from 1,021 individuals living across three counties in Kenya: Turkana, Machakos and Narok. The data are made available with sub-county level geospatial attribution. Socioeconomic data were collected on housing, healthcare, water sources, electricity access, experience of extreme weather events, community services, and access to information. Value perception data were collected using the user-perceived value (UPV) method - a perception-based surveying approach which requires interviewees to select their most valued household items in different circumstances, and explain their choice through 'why'-probing. For this dataset, the UPV method was used to identify the most valued household items in daily life and in the event of an extreme weather event, e.g. a drought, floor or heatwave. Together, the socioeconomic and interview data can be used to better understand the views of different communities and demographic groups across Kenya concerning climate change and extreme weather events. They also provide insight about the intrinsic, social, emotional, epistemic, functional, and indigenous value associated with everyday household items.
C1 [Stockport, Beatrice; Yang, Pu; Kimani, James; Hirmer, Stephanie] Univ Oxford, Dept Engn Sci, Oxford OX1 3PJ, England.
   [Kimani, James] JapakGIS Ltd, Garden Estate Rd, Nairobi City, Kenya.
C3 University of Oxford
RP Stockport, B (corresponding author), Univ Oxford, Dept Engn Sci, Oxford OX1 3PJ, England.
EM beatrice.stockport@eng.ox.ac.uk; pu.yang@eng.ox.ac.uk;
   james@japakgis.com; alycia.leonard@eng.ox.ac.uk;
   stephanie.hirmer@eng.ox.ac.uk
OI Stockport, Beatrice/0009-0000-0530-4343; Leonard,
   Alycia/0000-0002-7072-9150; Hirmer, Stephanie/0000-0001-7628-9259
FU Climate Compatible Growth (CCG) Programme by UK Aid [GB-HESA-100
   04113-30 0125]
FX The data collection was funded by the Climate Compatible Growth (CCG)
   Programme GB-HESA-100 04113-30 0125, a research programme funded by UK
   Aid. However, the views expressed herein do not necessarily reflect the
   UK Government's official policies.
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NR 16
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-3409
J9 DATA BRIEF
JI Data Brief
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 57
AR 110978
DI 10.1016/j.dib.2024.110978
EA OCT 2024
PG 10
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA J1S9O
UT WOS:001334950200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Menegatto, M
   Freschi, G
   Bulfon, M
   Zamperini, A
AF Menegatto, Marialuisa
   Freschi, Gloria
   Bulfon, Margherita
   Zamperini, Adriano
TI Collectively Remembering Environmental Disasters: The Vaia Storm as a
   Case Study
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE collective memory; environmental disasters; climate change adaptation;
   community resilience; environmental stewardship
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; MEMORY; ANTHROPOCENE; PSYCHOLOGY; MANAGEMENT; IDENTITY;
   GRIEF; TIME
AB This study investigated the relatively unexplored topic of the collective memory of environmental disasters from a psychosocial perspective. To achieve this, we conducted an exploratory case study on the Vaia storm, which hit the Italian Alps in October 2018, causing significant social and ecological damage. We carried out thirteen in-depth semi-structured interviews with members of the enunciatory community of Vaia as follows: groups of people who either experienced the disaster firsthand, studied it, or had a particular interest in it. Through a thematic analysis of the interview transcripts, the four following key themes emerged that illustrate the forms taken by the collective memory of the disaster: (1) a sensory dimension; (2) an emotional dimension; (3) a narrative dimension; and (4) a material dimension. Our findings suggest a non-anthropocentric, hybrid understanding of collective memory, aligning with emerging concepts in the psychosocial literature on the emotional impacts of environmental disasters. We also advance potential future research questions at the intersection of memory studies, resilience, and sustainability and stress the practical implications of collective memory in fostering sustainable practices and enhancing climate resilience.
C1 [Menegatto, Marialuisa; Freschi, Gloria; Bulfon, Margherita; Zamperini, Adriano] Univ Padua, Dept Philosophy Sociol Pedag & Appl Psychol, I-35131 Padua, Italy.
C3 University of Padua
RP Zamperini, A (corresponding author), Univ Padua, Dept Philosophy Sociol Pedag & Appl Psychol, I-35131 Padua, Italy.
EM marialuisa.menegatto@unipd.it; gloria.freschi@phd.unipd.it;
   margherita.bulfon@studenti.unipd.it; adriano.zamperini@unipd.it
RI Menegatto, Marialuisa/HPD-2335-2023; Freschi, Gloria/JWP-5804-2024
OI Menegatto, Marialuisa/0000-0002-5607-7635
FU the Italian Ministry of University [C96E22000490007]; Italian Ministry
   of University and Research -National Recovery and Resilience Plan
FX This research has been supported by the Italian Ministry of University
   and Research -National Recovery and Resilience Plan
   (PNRR)-NextGenerationEU (grant no. C96E22000490007).
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PD OCT
PY 2024
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WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA I8W3W
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OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Saddington, L
AF Saddington, Liam
TI The &apos;Tilt&apos; and the &apos;Pacific Uplift&apos; in &apos;Global
   Britain&apos;s&apos; ties with the Pacific Islands
SO ASIA EUROPE JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; FIJI
AB Following the 2016 vote to leave the European Union, the British government sought to construct the UK as "Global Britain" to reinvigorate its foreign policy. Subsequently, in 2019, the UK government announced a "Pacific Uplift" to facilitate greater engagement with the Pacific Island States. Alongside Australia's "Pacific Step Up" and New Zealand's "Pacific Reset", this engagement is part of a wider shift in foreign relations as Western powers seek to counter perceived Chinese influence in the region. Within this article, I consider the changing relationship between the UK and the Pacific Island States. I argue that the UK's "Pacific Uplift" was shaped by colonial legacies despite the absence of discussion of them. I contend that the UK's re-engagement with Pacific Islanders is influenced by the announcement of the Australian-UK-US (AUKUS) security alliance and the UK's wider military presence continues to be framed by colonial legacies. Finally, I argue that climate-ocean governance has been utilised by the UK to leverage influence as a partner rather than a former colonial power. I advocate for greater scrutiny of the UK's changing relationship with Pacific Island States.
C1 [Saddington, Liam] Univ Cambridge, Dept Geog, Cambridge, England.
C3 University of Cambridge
RP Saddington, L (corresponding author), Univ Cambridge, Dept Geog, Cambridge, England.
EM lrs46@cam.ac.uk
RI Saddington, Liam/IVV-7624-2023
FU Economic and Social Research Council; ESRC [ES/W005646/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX I would like to thank Phil Steinberg and Klaus Dodds for useful
   conversations which helped shaped the ideas of this paper. I would like
   to thank Rory Walshe for his feedback on a draft of this paper. Thank
   you to the anonymous reviewers for their constructive reviews.
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NR 83
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PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1610-2932
EI 1612-1031
J9 ASIA EUR J
JI Asia Eur. J.
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 22
IS 1
BP 85
EP 102
DI 10.1007/s10308-024-00691-3
EA FEB 2024
PG 18
WC International Relations
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC International Relations
GA PS4T4
UT WOS:001164501200001
OA hybrid, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kronvall, A
   Haupt, W
   Kern, K
AF Kronvall, Anna
   Haupt, Wolfgang
   Kern, Kristine
TI Transformative climate governance in small Swedish municipalities:
   Exploring the cases of Enköping and Kiruna
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE capacity-building; climate change adaptation; climate change mitigation;
   experimental governance; local authorities; multi-level governance;
   sustainability transformations
ID SUSTAINABILITY TRANSITIONS; URBAN SUSTAINABILITY; CHANGE ADAPTATION;
   LOCAL GOVERNANCE; CITIES; POLICY; ENERGY; INTERVENTIONS; ORGANIZATION;
   REFLECTIONS
AB Local authorities are important actors in sustainability transformations, but smaller municipalities generally do not have the same capacities as larger ones to work strategically with climate-related risks and long-term sustainability issues. Our study analyses the efforts of two Swedish local authorities to build capacity for transformative climate governance, paying attention to how structural factors and multi-level governance relations shape local capacity building. Drawing on interviews with municipal staff and the analysis of policy documents we show that both local authorities are increasingly applying experimental climate governance approaches. In Enkoping, innovative governance processes support sustainability objectives and promote public-private collaboration. In Kiruna, the necessity to move the town centre has advanced innovation capacity but steals attention from other issues. We conclude that vertical and horizontal multi-level governance relations facilitate capacity building, but in a national context where climate action is largely voluntary, more support is needed for smaller municipalities with limited resources to reach their climate goals.
C1 [Kronvall, Anna; Haupt, Wolfgang; Kern, Kristine] Leibniz Inst Res Soc & Space, Erkner, Germany.
   [Kern, Kristine] Abo Akad Univ, Fac Social Sci Business & Econ & Law, Turku, Finland.
   [Kronvall, Anna] Leibniz Inst Raumbezogene Sozialforsch IRS, Flakenstr 29-31, D-15537 Erkner, Germany.
C3 Leibniz Association; Leibniz Institut fur Raumbezogene Sozialforschung
   (IRS); Abo Akademi University; Leibniz Association; Leibniz Institut fur
   Raumbezogene Sozialforschung (IRS)
RP Kronvall, A (corresponding author), Leibniz Inst Raumbezogene Sozialforsch IRS, Flakenstr 29-31, D-15537 Erkner, Germany.
EM anna.kronvall@leibniz-irs.de
RI Haupt, Wolfgang/AET-1139-2022
OI Kern, Kristine/0000-0001-9923-4621
FU Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.
FX Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL.
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NR 88
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 8
U2 13
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA ONE MONTGOMERY ST, SUITE 1200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104 USA
SN 1756-932X
EI 1756-9338
J9 ENVIRON POLICY GOV
JI Environ. Policy Gov.
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 34
IS 4
BP 339
EP 351
DI 10.1002/eet.2086
EA NOV 2023
PG 13
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA A5Y5H
UT WOS:001102387500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dinis, LT
   Malheiro, AC
   Luzio, A
   Fraga, H
   Ferreira, H
   Gonçalves, I
   Pinto, G
   Correia, CM
   Moutinho-Pereira, J
AF Dinis, L. -T.
   Malheiro, A. C.
   Luzio, A.
   Fraga, H.
   Ferreira, H.
   Goncalves, I.
   Pinto, G.
   Correia, C. M.
   Moutinho-Pereira, J.
TI Improvement of grapevine physiology and yield under summer stress by
   kaolin-foliar application: water relations, photosynthesis and oxidative
   damage
SO PHOTOSYNTHETICA
LA English
DT Article
DE biochemistry; Douro region; oxidative stress; Vitis vinifera
ID LEAF GAS-EXCHANGE; USE EFFICIENCY; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PARTICLE FILM;
   CHLOROPHYLL FLUORESCENCE; SECONDARY METABOLISM; DEFICIT IRRIGATION;
   FIELD CONDITIONS; NITROGEN; BERRY
AB Knowledge about short-term climate change adaptation strategies for Mediterranean vineyards is needed in order to improve grapevine physiology and yield-quality attributes. We investigated effects of kaolin-particle film suspension on water relations, photosynthesis and oxidative stress of field-grown grapevines in the Douro region (northern Portugal) in 2012 and 2013. Kaolin suspension decreased leaf temperature by 18% and increased leaf water potential (up to 40.7% in 2013). Maximum photochemical quantum efficiency of PSII was higher and the minimal chlorophyll fluorescence was lower in the plants sprayed by kaolin. Two months after application, net photosynthesis and stomatal conductance at midday increased by 58.7 and 28.4%, respectively, in treated plants. In the same period, kaolin treatment increased photochemical reflectance, photosynthetic pigments, soluble proteins, soluble sugars, and starch concentrations, while decreased total phenols and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances. Kaolin application can be an operational tool to alleviate summer stresses, which ameliorates grapevine physiology and consequently leads to a higher yield.
C1 [Dinis, L. -T.; Malheiro, A. C.; Luzio, A.; Fraga, H.; Ferreira, H.; Correia, C. M.; Moutinho-Pereira, J.] Univ Tras Os Montes & Alto Douro, Ctr Res & Technol Agroenvironm & Biol Sci CITAB, Apt 1013, P-5001801 Vila Real, Portugal.
   [Goncalves, I.] Assoc Desenvolvimento Viticultura Duriense ADVID, Edificio Ctr Excelencia Vinha & Vinho, P-5000033 Vila Real, Portugal.
   [Pinto, G.] Univ Aveiro, Dept Biol, Campus Univ Santiago, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Pinto, G.] Univ Aveiro, CESAM Ctr Environm & Marine Studies, Campus Univ Santiago, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
C3 University of Tras-os-Montes & Alto Douro; Universidade de Aveiro;
   Universidade de Aveiro
RP Dinis, LT (corresponding author), Univ Tras Os Montes & Alto Douro, Ctr Res & Technol Agroenvironm & Biol Sci CITAB, Apt 1013, P-5001801 Vila Real, Portugal.
EM liatdinis@utad.pt
RI ; Dinis, Lia/J-7560-2013; Correia, Carlos/J-7948-2013; Pinto,
   Gloria/B-1271-2011; Moutinho-Pereira, Jose/J-6950-2013; Fraga,
   Helder/D-8507-2012; Malheiro, Aureliano/H-6155-2011
OI Luzio, Ana/0000-0001-5052-3596; Dinis, Lia/0000-0002-9612-0909;
   Fernandes Ferreira, Helena Maria/0000-0002-7574-8422; Correia,
   Carlos/0000-0003-2482-7873; Pinto, Gloria/0000-0001-7735-5131;
   Moutinho-Pereira, Jose/0000-0001-5825-559X; Fraga,
   Helder/0000-0002-7946-8786; Malheiro, Aureliano/0000-0001-6606-1787
FU C&DT INTERACT project - "Integrated Research in Environment, Agro-Chain
   and Technology" [NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000017]; European Regional
   Development Fund (ERDF) through NORTE; Award "Fundacao Maria Rosa"; 
   [SFRH/BPD/84676/2012];  [BPD/INTERACT/VITALITYWINE/184/2016]; 
   [SFR/BPD/101669/2014]
FX The study was undertaken under the IC&DT INTERACT project - "Integrated
   Research in Environment, Agro-Chain and Technology", no.
   NORTE-01-0145-FEDER-000017, in its line of research entitled
   VitalityWINE, co-financed by the European Regional Development Fund
   (ERDF) through NORTE 2020 and Award "Fundacao Maria Rosa" to our team.
   The postdoctoral fellowships awarded to L.-T. Dinis
   (SFRH/BPD/84676/2012), A. Luzio (BPD/INTERACT/VITALITYWINE/184/2016),
   and G. Pinto (SFR/BPD/101669/2014) are appreciated. We would also like
   to thank to "Quinta do Vallado" for the collaboration and efforts in
   making the vineyard's facilities available for the research and
   particularly to Antonio Pinto and Daniel Gomes and BASF for
   collaboration.
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NR 57
TC 50
Z9 56
U1 1
U2 48
PU ACAD SCIENCES CZECH REPUBLIC, INST EXPERIMENTAL BOTANY
PI 6 PRAGUE
PA NA KARLOVCE 1A,, 6 PRAGUE, 160 00, CZECH REPUBLIC
SN 0300-3604
EI 1573-9058
J9 PHOTOSYNTHETICA
JI Photosynthetica
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 56
IS 2
BP 641
EP 651
DI 10.1007/s11099-017-0714-3
PG 11
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA GE5KY
UT WOS:000431262000019
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Karnauskas, KB
   Donnelly, JP
   Anchukaitis, KJ
AF Karnauskas, Kristopher B.
   Donnelly, Jeffrey P.
   Anchukaitis, Kevin J.
TI Future freshwater stress for island populations
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID EARTH SYSTEM MODEL; CLIMATE-CHANGE; COUPLED MODEL; EVAPORATION;
   RAINFALL; VULNERABILITY; SIMULATION; RESOURCES; PATTERNS
AB Global climate models project large changes in the terrestrial water balance for many regions over this century in response to greenhouse gas emission(1-9), but insufficient resolution precludes such knowledge for approximately 18 million people living on small islands scattered across the world ocean. By accounting for evaporative demand a posteriori at 80 island groups distributed among Earth's major ocean basins, we reveal a robust yet spatially variable tendency towards increasing aridity at over 73% of island groups (16 million people) by mid-century. Although about half of the island groups are projected to experience increased rainfall predominantly in the deep tropics projected changes in evaporation are more uniform, shifting the global distribution of changes in island freshwater balance towards greater aridity. In many cases, the magnitude of projected drying is comparable to the amplitude of the estimated observed interannual variability, with important consequences for extreme events as well as mean climate. Future freshwater stress, including geographic and seasonal variability, has important implications for climate change adaptation scenarios for vulnerable human populations living on islands across the world ocean.
C1 [Karnauskas, Kristopher B.] Univ Colorado, Cooperat Inst Res Environm Sci, 216 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Karnauskas, Kristopher B.] Univ Colorado, Dept Atmospher & Ocean Sci, 311 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Donnelly, Jeffrey P.] Woods Hole Oceanog Inst, Dept Geol & Geophys, 266 Woods Hole Rd, Woods Hole, MA 02543 USA.
   [Anchukaitis, Kevin J.] Univ Arizona, Sch Geog & Dev, POB 210137, Tucson, AZ 85721 USA.
C3 University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder;
   University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder; Woods
   Hole Oceanographic Institution; University of Arizona
RP Karnauskas, KB (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, Cooperat Inst Res Environm Sci, 216 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.; Karnauskas, KB (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, Dept Atmospher & Ocean Sci, 311 UCB, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
EM kristopher.karnauskas@colorado.edu
FU Strategic Environmental Research and Development Program (SERDP); Alfred
   P. Sloan Foundation; James E. and Barbara V. Moltz Fellowship; NSF
   [BCS-1263609, OCE-0327513, OCE-752606, OCE-0926766]; NOAA through the
   Cooperative Institute for Climate and Ocean Research (CICOR)
   [NA17RJ1223, NA090AR4320129]; Direct For Social, Behav & Economic Scie;
   Division Of Behavioral and Cognitive Sci [1619798] Funding Source:
   National Science Foundation
FX K.B.K. and J.P.D. acknowledge support from the Strategic Environmental
   Research and Development Program (SERDP). SERDP is the environmental
   science and technology programme of the US Department of Defense (DoD)
   in partnership With the US Department of Energy (DOE) and the US
   Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). K.B.K. further acknowledges
   support from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and the James E. and Barbara
   V. Moltz Fellowship administered by the WHOI Ocean and Climate Change
   Institute (OCCI). K.J.A. acknowledges support from NSF grant
   BCS-1263609. The authors thank C. Ummenhofer for helpful discussions.
   The authors thank NOAA NCDC for providing GHCN station observations. The
   WHOI Hawaii Ocean Timeseries Site (WHOPS) mooring is supported by NOAA
   through the Cooperative Institute for Climate and Ocean Research (CICOR)
   under Grant No. NA17RJ1223 and NA090AR4320129 to WHOI, and by NSF grants
   OCE-0327513, OCE-752606, and OCE-0926766 to the University of Hawaii.
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NR 50
TC 42
Z9 47
U1 3
U2 30
PU NATURE RESEARCH
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD JUL
PY 2016
VL 6
IS 7
BP 720
EP +
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE2987
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DP6LP
UT WOS:000378608900032
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Millar, R
   Allen, M
   Rogelj, J
   Friedlingstein, P
AF Millar, Richard
   Allen, Myles
   Rogelj, Joeri
   Friedlingstein, Pierre
TI The cumulative carbon budget and its implications
SO OXFORD REVIEW OF ECONOMIC POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate policy; fossil fuels; uncertainty; integrated
   assessment; carbon budgets
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ATMOSPHERIC CO2; FOSSIL-FUELS; EMISSIONS; DIOXIDE;
   SENSITIVITY; TARGETS; GROWTH; MODEL; CMIP5
AB The cumulative impact of carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions on climate has potentially profound economic and policy implications. It implies that the long-term climate change mitigation challenge should be reframed as a stock problem, while the overwhelming majority of climate policies continue to focus on the flow of CO2 into the atmosphere in 2030 or 2050. An obstacle, however, to the use of a cumulative carbon budget in policy is uncertainty in the size of this budget consistent with any specific temperature-based goal such as limiting warming to 2A degrees C. This arises from uncertainty in the climate response to CO2 emissions, which is relatively tractable, and uncertainty in future warming due to non-CO2 drivers, which is less so. We argue these uncertainties are best addressed through policies that recognize the need to reduce net global CO2 emissions to zero to stabilize global temperatures but adapt automatically to evolving climate change. Adaptive policies would fit well within the Paris Agreement under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
C1 [Millar, Richard] Univ Oxford, Dept Phys, Oxford OX1 2JD, England.
   [Allen, Myles] Univ Oxford, Sch Geog & Environm, Oxford OX1 2JD, England.
   [Rogelj, Joeri] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Vienna, Austria.
   [Friedlingstein, Pierre] Univ Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QJ, Devon, England.
C3 University of Oxford; University of Oxford; International Institute for
   Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA); University of Exeter
RP Millar, R (corresponding author), Univ Oxford, Dept Phys, Oxford OX1 2JD, England.; Allen, M (corresponding author), Univ Oxford, Sch Geog & Environm, Oxford OX1 2JD, England.; Rogelj, J (corresponding author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Vienna, Austria.; Friedlingstein, P (corresponding author), Univ Exeter, Exeter EX4 4QJ, Devon, England.
EM richard.millar@physics.ox.ac.uk; myles.allen@ouce.ox.ac.uk;
   rogelj@iiasa.ac.at; p.friedlingstein@exeter.ac.uk
RI Rogelj, Joeri/I-7108-2012; Friedlingstein, Pierre/H-2700-2014
OI Rogelj, Joeri/0000-0003-2056-9061
FU NERC [NE/I00680X/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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NR 64
TC 39
Z9 40
U1 2
U2 45
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0266-903X
EI 1460-2121
J9 OXFORD REV ECON POL
JI Oxf. Rev. Econ. Policy
PD SUM
PY 2016
VL 32
IS 2
BP 323
EP 342
DI 10.1093/oxrep/grw009
PG 20
WC Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA DK7EZ
UT WOS:000375089000008
OA Green Accepted, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mitchell, D
   Enemark, S
   van der Molen, P
AF Mitchell, David
   Enemark, Stig
   van der Molen, Paul
TI Climate resilient urban development: Why responsible land governance is
   important
SO LAND USE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate resilient urban development; Responsible land governance; Land
   administration; Tenure security; Land-use planning and control
AB In less-developed countries, the major global pressures of rapid urbanization and climate change are resulting in increased vulnerability for urban dwellers. Much of the climate impact is concentrated in urban and coastal areas, as urban development spreads into areas that are hazard-prone. Often this development is dominated by poor quality homes in informal settlements or slums on informal or illegally occupied or subdivided land.
   Urban development needs to be more climate-resilient to meet the post millennium development goals (MDGs) agenda. One of the elements in achieving climate-resilient urban development is the degree to which climate change adaptation and risk management are mainstreamed into two major elements of land governance, viz, securing and safeguarding of land rights, and planning and control of land-use.
   This paper proposes ways in which the growth of human settlements can be better managed through responsible governance of land tenure rights, and effective land-use planning to reduce vulnerability, provide adequate access to safe land and shelter, and improve environmental sustainability. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Mitchell, David] RMIT Univ, Sch Math & Geospatial Sci, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
   [Enemark, Stig] Aalborg Univ, Dept Dev & Planning, DK-9220 Aalborg, Denmark.
   [van der Molen, Paul] Univ Twente, Geoinformat Sci & Earth Observat, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands.
C3 Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT); Aalborg University;
   University of Twente
RP Mitchell, D (corresponding author), RMIT Univ, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
EM david.mitchell@rmit.edu.au; enemark@plan.aau.dk;
   p.vandermolen-2@utwente.nl
RI Mitchell, David/N-4148-2016
OI Mitchell, David/0000-0002-8782-6440
CR [Anonymous], 2011, C PART ITS 16 SESS H
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   [No title captured]
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NR 40
TC 38
Z9 41
U1 1
U2 78
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-8377
EI 1873-5754
J9 LAND USE POLICY
JI Land Use Pol.
PD NOV
PY 2015
VL 48
BP 190
EP 198
DI 10.1016/j.landusepol.2015.05.026
PG 9
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CS5XY
UT WOS:000362152800016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Githunguri, CM
   Lung'ahi, EG
   Kabugu, J
   Musili, R
AF Githunguri, Cyrus M.
   Lung'ahi, Esther G.
   Kabugu, Joan
   Musili, Rhoda
BE Filho, WL
   Esilaba, AO
   Rao, KPC
   Sridhar, G
TI Cassava Farming Transforming Livelihoods Among Smallholder Farmers in
   Mutomo a Semi-arid District in Kenya
SO ADAPTING AFRICAN AGRICULTURE TO CLIMATE CHANGE: TRANSFORMING RURAL
   LIVELIHOODS
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Conference on Transforming Rural Livelihoods in Africa - How Can Land
   and Water Management Contribute to Enhanced Food Security and Address
   Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
CY OCT 20-25, 2013
CL Nakuru, KENYA
SP Soil Sci Soc E Africa, African Soil Sci Soc
DE Cassava; Climate change; Adaptation; Semi-arid areas
AB The study established that climate change is real and has negatively affected smallholder farmer families in Mutomo and as such it was prudent to introduce drought tolerant crops like cassava in order to improve food security as a climate change adaptation technology. It was evident that the elite cassava varieties from KARI were supplying the much needed carbohydrates in an affordable form. The assessment also established water scarcity is a major development-limiting factor in Mutomo that needed urgent attention. The Mutomo community had shed "Mwolyo" the hand-out mentality through adoption of appropriate technologies for this place like growing, processing, marketing, and consumption of cassava. Cassava roots were mainly marketed as fresh roots for chewing and boiling. Cassava cuttings and cakes on sale in the Mutomo market suggested that demand for cassava was rising and only need upscaling. Being dominated by agro-pastoralists, it was obvious that cassava and other crops that take more than four months before being harvested do not fit well into the system and this is an area that has to be addressed to pre-empt potential conflicts.
C1 [Githunguri, Cyrus M.] KARI Katumani Res Ctr, POB 340-90100, Machakos, Kenya.
   [Lung'ahi, Esther G.; Kabugu, Joan] ALIN, Nairobi 1009800100, Kenya.
   [Musili, Rhoda] Mutomo Maarifa Ctr, ALIN, Mutomo, Kitui, Kenya.
RP Githunguri, CM (corresponding author), KARI Katumani Res Ctr, POB 340-90100, Machakos, Kenya.
EM cyrusgithunguri@yahoo.com
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NR 21
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 4
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-13000-2; 978-3-319-12999-0
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2015
BP 225
EP 233
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-13000-2_20
PG 9
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Agriculture, Multidisciplinary;
   Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Agriculture; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BF2JL
UT WOS:000380473000020
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thomas, F
   Sabel, CE
   Morton, K
   Hiscock, R
   Depledge, MH
AF Thomas, Felicity
   Sabel, Clive E.
   Morton, Katherine
   Hiscock, Rosemary
   Depledge, Michael H.
TI Extended impacts of climate change on health and wellbeing
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Mitigation; Health; Wellbeing
ID PUBLIC-HEALTH; HURRICANE KATRINA; CO-BENEFITS; ENVIRONMENTS; ADAPTATION;
   PATTERNS; CITIES; ENERGY
AB Anthropogenic climate change is progressively transforming the environment despite political and technological attempts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to tackle global warming. Here we propose that greater insight and understanding of the health-related impacts of climate change can be gained by integrating the positivist approaches used in public health and epidemiology, with holistic social science perspectives on health in which the concept of 'wellbeing' is more explicitly recognised. Such an approach enables us to acknowledge and explore a wide range of more subtle, yet important health-related outcomes of climate change. At the same time, incorporating notions of wellbeing enables recognition of both the health co-benefits and dis-benefits of climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies across different population groups and geographical contexts. The paper recommends that future adaptation and mitigation policies seek to ensure that benefits are available for all since current evidence suggests that they are spatially and socially differentiated, and their accessibility is dependent on a range of contextually specific socio-cultural factors. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Thomas, Felicity; Depledge, Michael H.] Univ Exeter, European Ctr Environm & Human Hlth, Sch Med, Royal Cornwall Hosp, Truro TR1 3HD, England.
   [Sabel, Clive E.] Univ Bristol, Sch Geog Sci, Bristol BS8 1SS, Avon, England.
   [Morton, Katherine] Univ Exeter, Dept Geog, Exeter EX4 4RJ, Devon, England.
   [Hiscock, Rosemary] Univ Bath, Dept Hlth, Bath BA2 7AY, Avon, England.
C3 University of Exeter; Royal Cornwall Hospital; University of Bristol;
   University of Exeter; University of Bath
RP Thomas, F (corresponding author), Univ Exeter, European Ctr Environm & Human Hlth, Sch Med, Royal Cornwall Hosp, Truro TR1 3HD, England.
EM f.thomas@exeter.ac.uk; c.sabel@bristol.ac.uk; kjpm201@exeter.ac.uk;
   r.hiscock@bath.ac.uk; m.depledge@exeter.ac.uk
RI Hiscock, Rosemary/D-8179-2011; Sabel, Clive/A-5541-2012; Thomas,
   Felicity/LIC-6368-2024
OI Depledge, Michael/0000-0002-7216-0439; Sabel, Clive/0000-0001-9180-4861;
   Thomas, Felicity/0000-0002-7572-3030; Hiscock,
   Rosemary/0000-0001-9741-9083
FU EU FP7 URGENCHE programme; EU ERDF; ESF funds
FX The research was funded by the EU FP7 URGENCHE programme and from the EU
   ERDF and ESF funds.
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NR 62
TC 36
Z9 44
U1 2
U2 66
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD DEC
PY 2014
VL 44
BP 271
EP 278
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2014.08.011
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AR8QL
UT WOS:000343839600023
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Godden, L
   Kung, A
AF Godden, Lee
   Kung, Anthony
TI Water Law and Planning Frameworks Under Climate Change Variability:
   Systemic and Adaptive Management of Flood Risk
SO WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Flood risk and climate change; Climate change adaptation and planning
   for flood risk; Water law and governance
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; CHANGE IMPACTS; STATIONARITY; RESTORATION; ECOLOGY;
   DEAD
AB Climate change is predicted to bring more extreme climatic variability to Australia. Yet recent reforms to Australian water law and governance have typically focused on water scarcity, not floods. In the summer of 2010/2011, devastating floods in a major urban centre and in regional areas were powerful reminders of the need for more systemic and adaptive responses for water resources management. Using Queensland and Victoria as case studies, the article demonstrates how the water law frameworks in both states assume 'stationarity' through the adoption of standards such as the 1: 100 year flood event probability-an assumption that climate change has rendered unreliable. The article then examines the consequences of reliance on these past modes, particularly in respect of land use planning measures for flood risk adaptation. Finally, this article considers systemic responses for improved flood management focussing on strategic government planning, driven in part by potential litigation in the courts, as well as more local 'autonomous' adaptation in community-based initiatives.
C1 [Godden, Lee; Kung, Anthony] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Law Sch, CREEL, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
C3 University of Melbourne
RP Kung, A (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Law Sch, CREEL, Parkville, Vic 3052, Australia.
EM l.godden@unimelb.edu.au; kung@unimelb.edu.au
OI Godden, Lee/0000-0001-9534-5148
FU Australian Research Council [DP0987850]; Australian Research Council
   [DP0987850] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
FX The authors would like to thank the reviewers for their helpful and
   incisive comments, the journal and its editorial management; and to
   acknowledge the support provided by the Australian Research Council
   grant DP0987850 Responding to Climate Change: Australia's Environmental
   Law and Regulatory Framework.
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NR 50
TC 22
Z9 26
U1 0
U2 53
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0920-4741
EI 1573-1650
J9 WATER RESOUR MANAG
JI Water Resour. Manag.
PD DEC
PY 2011
VL 25
IS 15
SI SI
BP 4051
EP 4068
DI 10.1007/s11269-011-9887-x
PG 18
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA 858XU
UT WOS:000297837400007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Lemos, MF
AF Lemos, Maria Fernanda
BE Gamez, JLS
   Lin, Z
   Nesbit, JS
TI Climate adaptation in Rio Promoting the resilience of the west zone
   coastal area of Rio de Janeiro
SO RIO DE JANEIRO: URBAN EXPANSION AND ENVIRONMENT
SE Built Environment City Studies
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
C1 [Lemos, Maria Fernanda] Pontifical Catholic Univ Rio de Janeiro, Urban Planning, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [Lemos, Maria Fernanda] Pontifical Catholic Univ Rio de Janeiro, Dept Architecture & Urbanism, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [Lemos, Maria Fernanda] Pontificia Univ Catolica Rio de Janeiro, Nucleus Environm, Urban Planning & Climate Change, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
C3 Pontificia Universidade Catolica do Rio de Janeiro; Pontificia
   Universidade Catolica do Rio de Janeiro; Pontificia Universidade
   Catolica do Rio de Janeiro
RP Lemos, MF (corresponding author), Pontifical Catholic Univ Rio de Janeiro, Urban Planning, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.; Lemos, MF (corresponding author), Pontifical Catholic Univ Rio de Janeiro, Dept Architecture & Urbanism, Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
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NR 21
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-429-02044-5; 978-0-367-03103-9
J9 BUILT ENV CITY STUD
PY 2020
BP 139
EP 152
PG 14
WC Urban Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Urban Studies
GA BP2WT
UT WOS:000545562100012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, HY
   Shen, DL
   Bao, SW
   Len, P
AF Zhang, Hongyuan
   Shen, Dongliang
   Bao, Shaowu
   Len, Pietrafesa
TI Two-Way Coupling of the National Water Model (NWM) and Semi-Implicit
   Cross-Scale Hydroscience Integrated System Model (SCHISM) for Enhanced
   Coastal Discharge Predictions
SO HYDROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE coastal hydrology; model coupling; National Water Model; SCHISM; storm
   surge; tidal influence; flood; hurricane
AB This study addresses the limitations of and the common challenges faced by one-dimensional river-routing methods in hydrological models, including the National Water Model (NWM), in accurately representing coastal regions. We developed a two-way coupling between the NWM and the Semi-implicit Cross-scale Hydroscience Integrated System Model (SCHISM). The approach demonstrated improvements in modeling coastal river dynamics, particularly during extreme events like Hurricane Matthew. The coupled model successfully captured tidal influences, storm surge effects, and complex river-river interactions that the standalone NWM missed. The approach revealed more accurate representations of peak discharge timing and magnitude as well as water storage and release in coastal floodplains. However, we also identified challenges in reconciling variable representations between hydrological and hydraulic models. This work not only enhances the understanding of coastal-riverine interactions but also provides valuable insights for the development of next-generation hydrological models. The improved modeling capabilities have implications for flood forecasting, coastal management, and climate change adaptation in vulnerable coastal areas.
C1 [Zhang, Hongyuan; Bao, Shaowu; Len, Pietrafesa] Coastal Carolina Univ, Dept Marine Sci, Conway, SC 29526 USA.
   [Shen, Dongliang] Chinese Acad Sci, Key Lab Ocean Circulat & Waves, Inst Oceanol, Qingdao 266071, Peoples R China.
   [Len, Pietrafesa] North Carolina State Univ, Dept Marine Earth & Atmospher Sci, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA.
C3 Coastal Carolina University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of
   Oceanology, CAS; North Carolina State University
RP Zhang, HY (corresponding author), Coastal Carolina Univ, Dept Marine Sci, Conway, SC 29526 USA.
EM hzhang@coastal.edu; shendl@qdio.ac.cn; sbao@coastal.edu;
   ljpietra@ncsu.edu
RI Zhang, Hongyuan/L-5000-2019
OI Zhang, Hongyuan/0009-0005-5352-5585; bao, shaowu/0000-0002-1025-750X
FU National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration [NA22NWS4320003];
   National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
FX This research was funded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
   Administration (NOAA) awarded to the Cooperative Institute for Research
   on Hydrology (CIROH) through the NOAA Cooperative Agreement with The
   University of Alabama, NA22NWS4320003.
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NR 31
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2306-5338
J9 HYDROLOGY-BASEL
JI Hydrology
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 11
IS 9
AR 145
DI 10.3390/hydrology11090145
PG 16
WC Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Water Resources
GA H5I2W
UT WOS:001323770900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lavoie, J
   Caron, LP
   Logan, T
   Barrow, E
AF Lavoie, Juliette
   Caron, Louis-Philippe
   Logan, Travis
   Barrow, Elaine
TI Canadian climate data portals: A comparative analysis from a user
   perspective
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate data portals; Bias-adjustment; Climate simulations
ID MODELS; PRECIPITATION; TEMPERATURE; IMPACT
AB Climate data portals are essential tools for climate change adaptation. This study analyses differences between two Canadian portals providing bias-adjusted CMIP6 simulations: Climate Data Canada and Portraits Climatiques. The study evaluates three core variables (daily maximum temperature, daily minimum temperature and precipitation) as well as assesses five case studies, taken from the agriculture, transport and health sectors, that relied on climate indicators available through the portals. The underlying datasets vary in multiple ways (biasadjustment methodology, climate of reference, ensemble composition, emissions scenarios) and, in general, the climatology of variables and indicators tends to be statistically different between portals towards the end of the century. Differences are significantly reduced when comparing projected changes with respect to present climate conditions, highlighting the important role played by the dataset used as a reference for the bias-adjustment procedure. When considered from the point of view of practical applications, the discrepancies between the portals are generally, although not always, sufficiently small that they do not impact the resulting decisions. Finally, indicators based on a fixed threshold were found to be strongly influenced by the reference used for the bias adjustment.
C1 [Lavoie, Juliette; Caron, Louis-Philippe; Logan, Travis] Ouranos, 550 Sherbrooke W, Montreal, PQ H3A 1B9, Canada.
   [Barrow, Elaine] Environm & Climate Change Canada, Canadian Ctr Climate Serv, 200 boul Sacre Coeur, Gatineau K1A 0H3, PQ, Canada.
C3 Ouranos Consortium; Environment & Climate Change Canada
RP Lavoie, J (corresponding author), Ouranos, 550 Sherbrooke W, Montreal, PQ H3A 1B9, Canada.
EM lavoie.juliette@ouranos.ca
FU Government of Canada through the federal Department of Environment and
   Climate Change; Gouvernement du Quebec's Ministere de l'Environnement,
   de la Lutte contre les changements climatiques, de la Faune et des Parcs
   du Quebec; ECCC
FX We wish to thank ClimateData.ca, referred to as Climate Data Canada in
   this paper, for providing climate information. ClimateData.ca was
   created through a collaboration between the Pacific Climate Impacts
   Consortium (PCIC) , Ouranos Inc., the Prairie Climate Centre (PCC) ,
   Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) Centre de Recherche
   Informatique de Montreal (CRIM) and Habitat7 with funding from ECCC.
   Portraits Climatiques was created by Ouranos. This portal was undertaken
   with the financial support of the Government of Canada through the
   federal Department of Environment and Climate Change as well as the
   Gouvernement du Quebec's Ministere de l'Environnement, de la Lutte
   contre les changements climatiques, de la Faune et des Parcs du Quebec.
   This paper is part of the "Building Capacity to Use Climate Data in
   Decision-Making in Canada" project at the Computer Research Institute of
   Montreal (CRIM) with funding by ECCC. We are also grateful for the
   helpful input of Jeremy Fyke, Kari Tyler, Trevor Murdock, Joel R.
   Nodelman and Jim Barnes. We also thank Dorte Jakob and one anonymous
   reviewer for their insightful comments which helped us improved this
   manuscript.
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NR 48
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD APR
PY 2024
VL 34
AR 100471
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2024.100471
EA APR 2024
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA QY4P0
UT WOS:001224419100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Cioccolo, E
   Rossi, P
   Bianchini, L
   Colantoni, A
   Gherardi, M
   Cecchini, M
AF Cioccolo, Elisa
   Rossi, Pierluigi
   Bianchini, Leonardo
   Colantoni, Andrea
   Gherardi, Monica
   Cecchini, Massimo
BE Biocca, M
   Cavallo, E
   Cecchini, M
   Failla, S
   Berruto, R
   Romano, E
TI Chemical Risk Management in Agriculture and Climate Change: A Review
   from a "One Health" Perspective
SO SAFETY, HEALTH AND WELFARE IN AGRICULTURE AND AGRO-FOOD SYSTEMS, SHWA
   2023
SE Lecture Notes in Civil Engineering
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 7th Ragusa International Conference on Safety, Health and Welfare in
   Agriculture and Agro-Food Systems (SHWA)
CY SEP 06-09, 2023
CL Ragusa, ITALY
SP Int Comm Rural Engn, Italian Agr Engn Assoc
DE Plant protection products; Environment; Health; Occupational safety
AB This paper explores the correlation between climate change (CC) and chemical risk in agriculture. Agriculture is vulnerable to CC due to its dependence on weather conditions, with extreme events impacting productivity. Crop protection products help mitigate losses, but CC affects their distribution and persistence, increasing pollution risks. The study employs a bibliometric analysis using VOSviewer to identify keywords. It follows a two-part methodology: systematic literature searching and in-depth analysis. The search yields 133 relevant articles from 2019 to 2023.
   Findings indicate a connection between CC and chemical risk in agriculture. Rising temperatures and altered pest pressures may necessitate increased pesticide use, climate-induced factors affect chemical persistence, runoff and volatilization, technological advancements and organic practices offer mitigation strategies, precision agriculture and nanopesticides reduce emissions and, finally, organic farming and irrigation methods also impact chemical transport.
   The analysis reveals an evolving thematic research area with publications spanning various disciplines. The paper concludes that a holistic approach involving stakeholders is necessary to address the dual challenges of agricultural sustainability and climate change adaptation. Promoting eco-friendly practices can contribute to a toxic-free environment and a sustainable, circular economy.
C1 [Cioccolo, Elisa; Rossi, Pierluigi; Bianchini, Leonardo; Colantoni, Andrea; Cecchini, Massimo] Tuscia Univ Viterbo, Dept Agr & Forestry Sci DAFNE, Via San Camillo de Lellis Snc, I-01100 Viterbo, Italy.
   [Gherardi, Monica] INAIL, Dept Med Epidemiol Occupat & Environm Hyg, Via Fontana Candida 1, I-00078 Monte Porzio Catone, RM, Italy.
C3 Tuscia University; Istituto Nazionale per l'Assicurazione Contro gli
   Infortuni sul Lavoro (INAIL)
RP Cioccolo, E (corresponding author), Tuscia Univ Viterbo, Dept Agr & Forestry Sci DAFNE, Via San Camillo de Lellis Snc, I-01100 Viterbo, Italy.
EM elisa.cioccolo@unitus.it
RI Rossi, Pierluigi/JBS-7776-2023; Colantoni, Andrea/B-7593-2016
OI Rossi, Pierluigi/0000-0001-5782-3153; Cioccolo,
   Elisa/0000-0002-4067-3248
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NR 8
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 2366-2557
EI 2366-2565
BN 978-3-031-63506-9; 978-3-031-63504-5; 978-3-031-63503-8
J9 LECT NOTES CIVIL ENG
PY 2024
VL 521
BP 457
EP 464
DI 10.1007/978-3-031-63504-5_46
PG 8
WC Agricultural Engineering
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture
GA BX7QO
UT WOS:001324858000046
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Odemark, K
   Müller, M
   Palerme, C
   Tveito, OE
AF Odemark, Karianne
   Muller, Malte
   Palerme, Cyril
   Tveito, Ole Einar
TI Recent changes in circulation patterns and their opposing impact on
   extreme precipitation at the west coast of Norway
SO WEATHER AND CLIMATE EXTREMES
LA English
DT Article
DE Extreme precipitation; Circulation patterns; Ensemble data set; Trends
ID ARCTIC SEA-ICE; ATMOSPHERIC RIVERS; WEATHER; MODEL; AMPLIFICATION;
   TEMPERATURE; CLIMATE; EUROPE; LINK
AB Understanding recent and future changes of extreme precipitation is essential for climate change adaptation. Here, we use 3800 extreme precipitation events produced by an ensemble seasonal prediction system. The ensemble represents the climate from 1981 to 2018 and we analyse 3-day maximum precipitation events in September-October-November for the west coast of Norway. Two dominant atmospheric patterns, described by an empirical orthogonal function (EOF) analysis, are related to the results of the extreme value statistics. The principal components of the second and third mode of EOFs have significant trends over the last 40 years, but with an opposing impact on the return values of extreme precipitation. This explains the observed stationarity of extreme precipitation over recent decades at the west coast of Norway, which was also found in previous studies. The second mode of EOFs also shows a relation to the sea-ice coverage in the Barents and Kara Seas, which suggests a connection between the decline of sea-ice to the changes in the atmospheric pattern.
C1 [Odemark, Karianne; Muller, Malte; Palerme, Cyril; Tveito, Ole Einar] Norwegian Meteorol Inst, Oslo, Norway.
   [Odemark, Karianne; Muller, Malte] Univ Oslo, Dept Geosci, Oslo, Norway.
C3 Norwegian Meteorological Institute; University of Oslo
RP Odemark, K (corresponding author), Norwegian Meteorol Inst, Oslo, Norway.
EM karianneo@met.no
RI Tveito, Ole/G-4786-2019; Muller, Malte/AAD-7692-2022
OI Muller, Malte/0000-0003-2871-8359; Odemark,
   Karianne/0000-0002-2941-1984; Palerme, Cyril/0000-0003-1475-7496
FU Norwegian Research Council; Energi Norge, Norway [NFR-235710/E20]
FX The study is supported by the Norwegian Research Council and Energi
   Norge, Norway through the project FlomQ (NFR-235710/E20) . MM has
   received support from the project TWEX (NFR-255037) funded through the
   Norwegian Research Council. The data from SEAS5 and ERA5 data are
   available from the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S) Climate
   DataStore (https://cds.climate.copernicus.eu/) . The au-thors would like
   to thank the editor and two reviewers for their help in improving the
   paper. We are also thankful for helpful input from Inger Hanssen-Bauer.
   All authors approved the version of the manuscript to be published.
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NR 56
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 17
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0947
J9 WEATHER CLIM EXTREME
JI Weather Clim. Extremes
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 39
AR 100530
DI 10.1016/j.wace.2022.100530
EA DEC 2022
PG 10
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 7I8HZ
UT WOS:000904130700004
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Addaney, M
   Asibey, MO
   Cobbinah, PB
   Akudugu, JA
AF Addaney, Michael
   Asibey, Michael Osei
   Cobbinah, Patrick Brandful
   Akudugu, Jonas Ayaribilla
TI Climate change in rural Ghana: perceptions and adaptive responses
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive capacity; climate change; food systems; Ghana; rural resilience
ID ADAPTATION; PERSPECTIVES; VARIABILITY; CARBON
AB The purpose of this study is threefold: (i) to analyse local perceptions on climate change and events; (ii) to examine the impact of climate change on local livelihoods and food security and (iii) to explore climate change adaptive responses and challenges thereof. Using the Dormaa West District in Ghana as a case study, data were obtained from 190 household participants across randomly selected five communities; five focus group discussions and interviews with four planning and climate agencies. Both quantitative and qualitative techniques were employed to analyse the collected data. The results showed evidence of climate change with widespread impacts on local livelihood, particularly food production. There is evidence of unpredictable precipitation and warming temperatures over the past two decades with a high degree of variability. Key adaptive response measures included reliance on remittances, engaging in secondary livelihoods (e.g. driving and petty trading), and adjusting growing and harvesting seasons. Unfortunately, these measures were ad hoc, reactionary and unsustainable. The incorporation of farmer-based adaptation strategies into development and management plans, stakeholder participation, collaborations and partnerships are imperative in finding effective and sustainable adaptive response measures.
C1 [Addaney, Michael; Asibey, Michael Osei; Akudugu, Jonas Ayaribilla] Univ Energy & Nat Resources, Dept Planning & Sustainabil, POB 214, Sunyani, Ghana.
   [Cobbinah, Patrick Brandful] Univ Melbourne, Fac Architecture Bldg & Planning, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
C3 University of Melbourne
RP Addaney, M (corresponding author), Univ Energy & Nat Resources, Dept Planning & Sustainabil, POB 214, Sunyani, Ghana.
EM michael.addaney@uenr.edu.gh
RI Addaney, Michael/AAT-4157-2021; Cobbinah, Patrick/ABH-9950-2020; Asibey,
   Michael Osei/P-2396-2016
OI Cobbinah, Patrick Brandful/0000-0003-2522-9293; Asibey, Michael
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NR 73
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 14
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PD DEC 2
PY 2021
VL 26
IS 12
BP 1461
EP 1479
DI 10.1080/13549839.2021.1978411
EA SEP 2021
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA XA6NZ
UT WOS:000697641800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cornwell, E
   Sposito, V
   Faggian, R
AF Cornwell, Edward
   Sposito, Victor
   Faggian, Robert
TI Land suitability projections for traditional sub-alpine cropping in the
   Australian Alps and Chilean Dry Andes. A combined biophysical and
   irrigation potential perspective
SO APPLIED GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Land Suitability Analysis; irrigation potential; climate change
   adaptation; Fuzzy Membership; Monte Carlo Simulation; Australian Alps;
   Dry Andes
ID MURRAY-DARLING BASIN; CLIMATE-CHANGE; IMPACTS; WATER; ADAPTATION; GIS;
   AGRICULTURE; UNCERTAINTY; AVAILABILITY; MANAGEMENT
AB A GIS-based multi-criteria approach is applied in the Upper Murray River basin (Australian Alps) and Rapel River basin (Chilean Dry Andes) to project both biophysical and irrigation potential land suitability. Agricultural adaptation guidelines are then suggested in the context of agricultural expansion, land use change and water management. The findings show, first, the orographic hydro-climate patterns are the primary control over land suitability, its uncertainty and sensitivity. Second, the expected land suitability reduction during the 21st century will be driven primarily by catchment-level irrigation potential deficits even over the declining farm-level biophysical conditions. Third, a distinctive functionality for flatter and steeper agricultural systems is likely to be identifiable from land suitability trajectories. Further applications should be focused on regional-type studies and improvements regarding the effectiveness of expert judgement, validation, non-linear/daily dynamics and the influence of extreme climatology on land suitability.
C1 [Cornwell, Edward; Sposito, Victor; Faggian, Robert] Deakin Univ, Sch Life & Environm Sci, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, Vic 3125, Australia.
   [Cornwell, Edward; Sposito, Victor; Faggian, Robert] Deakin Univ, Ctr Reg & Rural Futures CeRRF, 75 Pigdons Rd, Waurn Ponds, Vic 3216, Australia.
C3 Deakin University; Deakin University
RP Cornwell, E (corresponding author), Deakin Univ, Sch Life & Environm Sci, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, Vic 3125, Australia.
EM ecornwel@deakin.edu.au
OI Faggian, Robert/0000-0001-8750-3062
FU Deakin University (Deakin University Postgraduate Research Scholarship -
   DUPRS)
FX This paper is part of a PhD project funded by Deakin University (Deakin
   University Postgraduate Research Scholarship - DUPRS). We want to thank
   Madeleine Johnson for providing the original LSA structures, and
   Alejandra Stehr for reviewing early drafts.
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NR 62
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 3
U2 15
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0143-6228
EI 1873-7730
J9 APPL GEOGR
JI Appl. Geogr.
PD AUG
PY 2020
VL 121
AR 102248
DI 10.1016/j.apgeog.2020.102248
PG 11
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA NB7QW
UT WOS:000560710300002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Martuti, NKT
   Pribadi, R
   Dewi, NK
   Sidiq, WABN
   Nugraha, SB
AF Martuti, N. K. T.
   Pribadi, R.
   Dewi, N. K.
   Sidiq, W. A. B. N.
   Nugraha, S. B.
GP IOP
TI The Dynamics of Coastline and Mangrove Ecosystems in Coastal Area of
   Mangkang Kulon Subdistrict, Semarang
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF MANGROVES AND ITS RELATED ECOSYSTEMS 2019
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference of Mangroves and Its Related Ecosystems
   (ICoMIRE)
CY AUG 21-23, 2019
CL Coordinating Minist Maritime Affairs, Purwokerto, INDONESIA
SP Univ Jenderal Soedirman, Fac Biol
HO Coordinating Minist Maritime Affairs
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION
AB Mangkang Kulon Subdistrict is one of the coastal areas in Semarang that has relatively dynamic conditions, which seen from the coastline and mangrove ecosystem changes within several years of observation. This study aims to observe coastline changes and the spatial distribution of mangrove ecosystems on the coast of Mangkang Kulon Subdistrict between 2005, 2012 and 2019. Land use n were obtained from visual interpretation of high-resolution digital globe satellite images from 2005, 2012, and 2019 which then tested the accuracy of land use interpretation through field observation and overlaid one another through vector analysis to find out the changes that have occurred. The study showed that the coastline changes were increasingly jutting towards the land in this range of time. This condition is affected by the port construction on the east coast of the Kendal Regency, which directly adjacent to the Mangkang Kulon Subdistrict. Meanwhile, the mangrove ecosystem has increased widely with relatively elongated and grouped spatial patterns. The increase that occurred as a manifestation of various coastal care activities in the form of mangrove planting activities carried out by several government agencies and private parties with a model of coastal community empowerment.
C1 [Martuti, N. K. T.; Dewi, N. K.] Univ Negeri Semarang, Fac Math & Nat Sci, Dept Biol, Kota Semarang, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia.
   [Pribadi, R.; Nugraha, S. B.] Diponegoro Univ, Fac Fisheries & Marine Sci, Kota Semarang, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia.
   [Sidiq, W. A. B. N.] Univ Negeri Semarang, Fac Social Sci, Dept Geog, Kota Semarang, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia.
C3 Universitas Negeri Semarang; Diponegoro University; Universitas Negeri
   Semarang
RP Martuti, NKT (corresponding author), Univ Negeri Semarang, Fac Math & Nat Sci, Dept Biol, Kota Semarang, Jawa Tengah, Indonesia.
EM nanakariada@mail.unnes.ac.id
RI Sidiq, Wahid/ABG-3889-2020; Nugraha, Satya/ABG-4016-2020; TM,
   Nana/AAB-9619-2021
OI Sidiq, Wahid Akhsin Budi Nur/0000-0002-6057-5231
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NR 28
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 4
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2020
VL 550
AR 012011
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/550/1/012011
PG 6
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA BR0KI
UT WOS:000629418900011
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gilroy, K
   Jeuken, A
AF Gilroy, Kristin
   Jeuken, Ad
TI Collaborative Risk Informed Decision Analysis: A water security case
   study in the Philippines
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Water resources planning; Decision support
   tool; Integrated water resources management; Climate vulnerability
   assessment
AB More frequent and intense hydrologic events under climate change are expected to enhance challenges for water security and flood risk management worldwide. Traditional planning approaches must be adapted to address climate change and develop solutions with an appropriate level of robustness and flexibility. The Collaborative Risk Informed Decision Analysis (CRIDA) method is a novel planning approach embodying a suite of complementary methods, including decision scaling and adaptation pathways, in a stakeholder driven process which guides decision makers through the planning and decision process, taking into account how the confidence in the available science, the consequences in the system, and the capacity of institutions should influence strategy selection. The purpose of this study is to apply the CRIDA approach to a water supply case study in Central Cebu, the Philippines in order to evaluate the added benefits of the method for planning and design under climate change uncertainty. This work will equip practitioners and decision makers with an example of a structured process for decision making under climate uncertainty that can be scaled as needed to the problem at hand.
C1 [Gilroy, Kristin] US Army Corps Engineers Inst Water Resources, 7701 Telegraph Rd, Alexandria, VA 22315 USA.
   [Jeuken, Ad] Deltares, Boussinesqweg 1, NL-2629 HV Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Deltares
RP Jeuken, A (corresponding author), Deltares, Boussinesqweg 1, NL-2629 HV Delft, Netherlands.
EM kristin.l.gilroy@usace.army.mil; ad.jeuken@deltares.nl
OI Jeuken, Ad/0000-0002-6903-5493
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NR 15
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 11
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD AUG
PY 2018
VL 11
BP 62
EP 71
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2018.04.002
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA VJ3JU
UT WOS:000582010700006
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lokman, K
AF Lokman, Kees
TI Cyborg landscapes: Choreographing resilient interactions between
   infrastructure, ecology, and society
SO JOURNAL OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE Cyborg landscapes; infrastructure; socioecological systems; climate
   change adaptation; regional planning
AB Contemporary challenges of climate change, population growth, resource scarcity, and environmental decline prompt designers to envision new relationships between nature and culture. Infrastructure design and adaptation are key to addressing theses issues. This article argues for the formulation of a landscape approach that integrates biotic and abiotic systems to envision more dynamic interactions among infrastructure, ecology, and urbanism. Conceptualized as cyborg landscapes, this approach embraces notions of change, adaptation, and feedback to create hybrid infrastructures of human and non-human systems, of living and non-living entities, across a range of spatial and temporal scales. Three examples illustrate that the profession is already (knowingly or unknowingly) working within this framework. Designed as co-dependent socioecological networks, these projects transform and choreograph landscape processes across multiple spatial and temporal scales. They promote an aesthetic that is predicated on relationships between dynamic things and systems. By stressing co-evolutionary processes between human agency and ecological systems, cyborg landscapes aspire to create multifunctional landscapes that do not simply operate in the present, but learn from experiences in order to adapt and grow smarter.
C1 [Lokman, Kees] Univ British Columbia, Sch Architecture & Landscape Architecture, 379 2357 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
C3 University of British Columbia
RP Lokman, K (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia, Sch Architecture & Landscape Architecture, 379 2357 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
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NR 47
TC 10
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 14
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1862-6033
EI 2164-604X
J9 J LANDSC ARCHIT
JI J. Landsc. Archit.
PY 2017
VL 12
IS 1
BP 60
EP 73
PG 14
WC Architecture
WE Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Architecture
GA EO1XE
UT WOS:000396490400006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Garcia-Holguera, M
   Clark, OG
   Sprecher, A
   Gaskin, S
AF Garcia-Holguera, Mercedes
   Clark, O. Grant
   Sprecher, Aaron
   Gaskin, Susan
TI Ecosystem biomimetics for resource use optimization in buildings
SO BUILDING RESEARCH AND INFORMATION
LA English
DT Article
DE design process; biomimicry; biomimetics; systems thinking; sustainable
   design; ecomimetics; ecological design
ID BIOMIMICRY; LANGUAGE; PLACE; MOUND
AB An ecomimetic method is developed as an innovative and transdisciplinary design approach rooted in the field of biomimetics. This new method emulates the interrelated complexity of the parts of an ecosystem with the intent to design buildings that are more efficient, effective and holistic. Ecomimetics refers to the design of buildings that mimic ecosystem processes and functions. This approach provides potential opportunities for climate change adaptation and mitigation by optimizing the use of resources in buildings. One challenge to the application of ecomimetics in architecture is the lack of systematic methods supported by scientific research, which may prevent development in this field. A theoretical basis and the initial development of an ecomimetic design method is presented, with a description of each step of the design process. Ecological systems are selected for functional properties that match architectural design goals, and then design tools are used to abstract and transfer those properties to architectural systems. The design tools integrated in the method are from the fields of ecological engineering, systems dynamics and architecture. The case of the Eastgate Center in Harare, Zimbabwe, is used to illustrate the method.
C1 [Garcia-Holguera, Mercedes; Clark, O. Grant] McGill Univ, Dept Bioresource Engn, Macdonald Stewart Bldg,21111 Lakeshore Rd, Ste Anne De Bellevue, PQ H9X 3V9, Canada.
   [Sprecher, Aaron] McGill Univ, Sch Architecture, Macdonald Harrington Bldg,815 Sherbrooke St West, Montreal, PQ H3A 0C2, Canada.
   [Gaskin, Susan] McGill Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Macdonald Engn Bldg,817 Sherbrooke St West, Montreal, PQ H3A 0C3, Canada.
C3 McGill University; McGill University; McGill University
RP Garcia-Holguera, M; Clark, OG (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Dept Bioresource Engn, Macdonald Stewart Bldg,21111 Lakeshore Rd, Ste Anne De Bellevue, PQ H9X 3V9, Canada.; Sprecher, A (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Sch Architecture, Macdonald Harrington Bldg,815 Sherbrooke St West, Montreal, PQ H3A 0C2, Canada.; Gaskin, S (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Macdonald Engn Bldg,817 Sherbrooke St West, Montreal, PQ H3A 0C3, Canada.
EM maria.garciaholguera@mcgill.ca; grant.clark@mcgill.ca;
   aaron.sprecher@mcgill.ca; susan.gaskin@mcgill.ca
RI Gaskin, Susan/AAF-2911-2019; , Mercedes/R-8988-2017
OI Gaskin, Susan/0000-0003-2036-2124; , Mercedes/0000-0002-8228-9180
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NR 61
TC 23
Z9 28
U1 7
U2 86
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0961-3218
EI 1466-4321
J9 BUILD RES INF
JI Build. Res. Informat.
PD APR 2
PY 2016
VL 44
IS 3
BP 263
EP 278
DI 10.1080/09613218.2015.1052315
PG 16
WC Construction & Building Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology
GA DF0DG
UT WOS:000371008600003
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lamhauge, N
   Lanzi, E
   Agrawala, S
AF Lamhauge, Nicolina
   Lanzi, Elisa
   Agrawala, Shardul
TI The use of indicators for monitoring and evaluation of adaptation:
   lessons from development cooperation agencies
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation; monitoring and evaluation; development
AB In the context of scaled-up funding for climate change adaptation, it is more important than ever to guarantee value for money of adaptation interventions. Robust monitoring and evaluation (M&E) ensures that the prospective benefits of interventions are being realized and it helps to improve the design of future projects and programmes. This paper is the first empirical assessment of M&E frameworks used by development cooperation agencies for projects and programmes with adaptation-specific or adaptation-related components. It analyses documents for 106 projects across 6 bilateral development agencies. The analysis finds that Result Based Management, the Logical Framework Approach and the accompanying logframe are the most common M&E approaches used for adaptation. In applying these approaches, the long-term perspective of most adaptation initiatives means that it is particularly important to clearly differentiate between outcomes, outputs and activities. In addition, M&E frameworks for adaptation should combine qualitative, quantitative and binary indicators. Baselines for these indicators should be specified to improve understanding of progress. Significant challenges remain in relation to dealing with shifting baselines, attribution and time lags between interventions and outcomes.
C1 [Lamhauge, Nicolina; Lanzi, Elisa; Agrawala, Shardul] OECD, Environm Directorate, Paris, France.
C3 Organisation for Economic Co-operation & Development (OECD)
RP Lamhauge, N (corresponding author), OECD, Environm Directorate, Paris, France.
EM nicolina.lamhauge@oecd.org
CR Adger W.N., 2004, New indicators of vulnerability and adaptive capacity
   [Anonymous], 2011, 1 IIED
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NR 14
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 0
U2 27
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD JUL 1
PY 2013
VL 5
IS 3
BP 229
EP 241
DI 10.1080/17565529.2013.801824
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 217NJ
UT WOS:000324365900006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Manzanedo, RD
   Fischer, M
   Navarro-Cerrillo, RM
   Allan, E
AF Manzanedo, Ruben D.
   Fischer, Markus
   Navarro-Cerrillo, Rafael Maria
   Allan, Eric
TI A new approach to study local adaptation in long-lived woody species:
   Virtual transplant experiments
SO METHODS IN ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
LA English
DT Article
DE common garden experiments; dendrochronology; local adaptation;
   reciprocal transplant experiments; tree adaptation; tree-rings; virtual
   transplant experiments
ID FAGUS-SYLVATICA L.; COMMON-GARDEN; TREE-RINGS; CLIMATE; BIODIVERSITY;
   GROWTH; FOREST; POPULATIONS; MIGRATION; COMMUNITY
AB Despite the importance of local adaptation and the extended literature that has addressed it, there are few methods available to explore local adaptation across large temporal scales. However, long-term patterns are likely to be essential to understanding adaptation in long-lived species, such as trees. Here, we propose a methodology named 'virtual transplant experiment' (VTE), which uses long-term climatic variability to explore local adaptation to climate in natural tree populations. VTEs evaluate the historical response of populations to their local climate and to climates representative of conditions in other populations. We tested our methodology using simulated data and applied it in two case studies on: (a) Pinus nigra populations at the edge of the species distribution, where previous research has suggested strong climate adaptation, and (b) Fagus sylvatica mesic populations, where parallel experiments showed no adaptation to macroclimate. VTE results from simulated and real-world data matched our expectations, suggesting that the method accurately identified the patterns of local adaptation to climate in tree populations. VTEs consistently discriminated locally adapted populations in synthetic data with a known degree of local adaptation. As expected, P. nigra populations showed adaptation to local climate in the VTE, while F. sylvatica populations showed no overall local advantage. Our method provides a new way to test for local adaptation over time scales encompassing the complete lifespan of trees. VTEs can complement current methods to study local adaptation by adding the ability to explore the long-term response to local climate in natural populations. The advantages and limitations of the different approaches to studying local adaptation stress the importance of combining multiple approaches to test for local adaptation in long-lived organisms.
C1 [Manzanedo, Ruben D.] Univ Washington, Biol Dept, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
   [Manzanedo, Ruben D.] Harvard Univ, Harvard Forest, Petersham, MA 01366 USA.
   [Fischer, Markus; Allan, Eric] Univ Bern, Inst Plant Sci, Bern, Switzerland.
   [Navarro-Cerrillo, Rafael Maria] Univ Cordoba, Dept Ingn Forestal, Cordoba, Spain.
C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; Harvard
   University; University of Bern; Universidad de Cordoba
RP Manzanedo, RD (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Biol Dept, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.; Manzanedo, RD (corresponding author), Harvard Univ, Harvard Forest, Petersham, MA 01366 USA.
EM rdmanzanedo@fas.harvard.edu
RI Fischer, Markus/C-6411-2008; Navarro-Cerrillo, Rafael/AAG-5872-2019;
   Allan, Eric/AAR-9566-2020
OI Delgado Manzanedo, Ruben/0000-0001-6592-7235; Allan,
   Eric/0000-0001-9641-9436
FU Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen
   Forschung; Seventh Framework Programme [265171]
FX Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen
   Forschung, Grant/Award Number: Early Post. doc Mobility; Seventh
   Framework Programme, Grant/Award Number: 265171
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NR 44
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 35
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 2041-210X
EI 2041-2096
J9 METHODS ECOL EVOL
JI Methods Ecol. Evol.
PD OCT
PY 2019
VL 10
IS 10
BP 1761
EP 1772
DI 10.1111/2041-210X.13267
EA AUG 2019
PG 12
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA JB0UB
UT WOS:000488345200001
OA Bronze, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hochrainer-Stigler, S
   Mechler, R
   Pflug, G
   Williges, K
AF Hochrainer-Stigler, Stefan
   Mechler, Reinhard
   Pflug, Georg
   Williges, Keith
TI Funding public adaptation to climate-related disasters. Estimates for a
   global fund
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Disaster risk; Public finance; Fiscal vulnerability; Global climate fund
AB Managing disaster risk is increasingly being considered a key line of response in climate adaptation. While funding support for adaptation has been pledged, rationales for support and cost implications are essentially unclear, which may explain why financing is currently only forthcoming at low levels. Various estimates for the costs of adaptation have been suggested, yet the rationale and robustness of the estimates have been difficult to verify. Focusing on weather-related extreme events, we conduct a global assessment of the public finance costs for financially managing extreme event risks. In doing so, we assess countries' fiscal disaster vulnerability, which we operationalize as the public sector's ability to pay for relief to the affected population and support the reconstruction of lost assets and infrastructure. Methods employed include minimum-distance techniques to estimate the tail behaviour of country disaster risks as well as the inclusion of non-linear loss and financing resources relationships. We find that many countries appear fiscal vulnerable and would require assistance from the donor community in order to bolster their fiscal resilience. Our estimates may inform decisions pertaining to a global fund for absorbing different levels of country risks. We find the costs of funds covering different risk layers to be in the lower billions of dollars annually, compared to estimates of global climate adaptation which reach to more than USD 100 billion annually. Our estimates relate to today's climate, and while disaster losses have currently not been robustly linked to climate change, physical science has made a strong case in attributing changes in climate extremes to anthropogenic Climate Change. We suggest that estimates of current weather variability and related risks, although also associated with substantial uncertainty, can be interpreted as a baseline for discussion and any future projections of risks. (c) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Hochrainer-Stigler, Stefan; Mechler, Reinhard; Pflug, Georg; Williges, Keith] IIASA Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Risk Policy & Vulnerabil Program, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Mechler, Reinhard] Univ Econ & Business, A-41020 Vienna, Austria.
C3 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
RP Hochrainer-Stigler, S (corresponding author), IIASA Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Risk Policy & Vulnerabil Program, Schlosspl 1, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
EM hochrain@iiasa.ac.at; mechler@iiasa.ac.at; pflug@iiasa.ac.at;
   williges@iiasa.ac.at
RI Pflug, Georg/D-9323-2017
OI Pflug, Georg/0000-0001-8215-3550; Williges, Keith/0000-0002-5139-2740;
   Hochrainer-Stigler, Stefan/0000-0002-9929-8171; /0000-0003-2239-1578
CR Agrawala S., 2008, Economic Aspects of Adaptation to Climate Change
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NR 48
TC 41
Z9 42
U1 0
U2 33
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD MAR
PY 2014
VL 25
BP 87
EP 96
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2014.01.011
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA AG7ZI
UT WOS:000335636900010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Byrd, KB
   Alvarez, P
   Sleeter, B
   Flint, L
   Flint, A
   Cameron, R
   Creque, J
AF Byrd, Kristin B.
   Alvarez, Pelayo
   Sleeter, Benjamin
   Flint, Lorraine
   Flint, Alan
   Cameron, Richard
   Creque, Jeffrey
TI Scenarios of climate adaptation potential on protected working lands
   from management of soils
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE working lands; private land conservation; climate adaptation; hydrologic
   benefits; soil organic matter; conservation practices
ID RISK
AB Management of protected lands may enhance ecosystem services that conservation programs were designed to protect. Practices that build soil organic matter on agricultural lands also increase soil water holding capacity, potentially reducing climatic water deficit (CWD), increasing actual evapotranspiration (AET) and increasing groundwater recharge (RCH). We developed nine spatially-explicit land use and conservation scenarios (2001-2100) in the LUCAS land use change model to address two questions for California working lands (cropland and rangeland): How does land use change limit opportunities to manage soils for hydrologic climate adaptation benefits? To what extent and where can soil management practices increase climate adaptation on protected working lands? Hydrologic benefits [Sigma(Delta CWD, Delta AET, Delta RCH)] due to soil management were simulated in the Basin Characterization Model (a state-wide water balance model) for two Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 climate models. LUCAS simulated land conversion and new conservation easements with potential for maximum hydrologic benefits. Climate drove differences in lost potential for water benefits due to urbanization (33.9-87.6 m(3) x 10(6)) in 2050. Conflict between development pressure and potential hydrologic benefits occurred most in Santa Clara County in the San Francisco Bay Area and Shasta County in Northern Sacramento Valley. Hydrologic benefits on easements were similar in magnitude to losses from development. Water savings from management of California Land Conservation (a.k.a. Williamson) Act contract lands were an order of magnitude greater, totaling over 460 m(3) x 10(6) annually in a drier climate by 2050. Few counties provide most benefits because of soil properties, climate and land area protected. The increase in hydrologic benefits varies by agricultural practice and adoption rate, land use type and configuration, and terms of conservation agreements. The effectiveness of programs designed to improve climate adaptation at county to state scales will likely increase by taking this variability into consideration.
C1 [Byrd, Kristin B.; Sleeter, Benjamin] US Geol Survey, Western Geog Sci Ctr, 345 Middlefield Rd, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA.
   [Alvarez, Pelayo; Creque, Jeffrey] Carbon Cycle Inst, Petaluma, CA USA.
   [Flint, Lorraine; Flint, Alan] US Geol Survey, Calif Water Sci Ctr, Sacramento, CA USA.
   [Cameron, Richard] Nature Conservancy, San Francisco, CA USA.
C3 United States Department of the Interior; United States Geological
   Survey; United States Department of the Interior; United States
   Geological Survey; Nature Conservancy
RP Byrd, KB (corresponding author), US Geol Survey, Western Geog Sci Ctr, 345 Middlefield Rd, Menlo Pk, CA 94025 USA.
EM kbyrd@usgs.gov
OI Sleeter, Benjamin/0000-0003-2371-9571; Byrd,
   Kristin/0000-0002-5725-7486; Cameron, David/0000-0001-7750-9049
FU California Natural Resources Agency; US Geological Survey Land Change
   Science Program
FX We thank the State of California Department of Conservation, Division of
   Land Resource Protection for providing access to the Williamson Act
   lands geodatabase and statistics on land protection programs that aided
   scenario development. We also thank Tamara Wilson, USGS and three
   anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments and suggestions.
   This research was funded by the California Natural Resources Agency and
   the US Geological Survey Land Change Science Program. Any use of trade,
   firm, or product names is for descriptive purposes only and does not
   imply endorsement by the U.S. Government.
CR AghaKouchak A, 2014, GEOPHYS RES LETT, V41, P8847, DOI 10.1002/2014GL062308
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NR 42
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 2
U2 9
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD OCT
PY 2019
VL 14
IS 10
AR 104001
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/ab3ca4
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA JT2IY
UT WOS:000500820700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jin, H
   Zhao, J
   Liu, SQ
   Kang, J
AF Jin, Hong
   Zhao, Jing
   Liu, Siqi
   Kang, Jian
TI Climate Adaptability Construction Technology of Historic Conservation
   Areas: The Case Study of the Chinese-Baroque Historic Conservation Area
   in Harbin
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE severe cold region; historical block; microclimate; climate adaptability
   technology
ID THERMAL COMFORT; DRY CLIMATE; MICROCLIMATE; HOT; AIR
AB In recent years, the conflict between human activities and the natural environment has led to global warming and extreme weather, which has provoked people into thinking about the climate adaptability of buildings. Historical blocks are usually built and designed based on the social environment and climatic conditions at that time; therefore, they generally contain the construction techniques relevant to dealing with the local climate. The study aims to study the microclimate characteristics of a historic conservation area in a severe cold region and to explore how it attempted to achieve climate adaptation. Taking the Chinese-Baroque historic conservation area in Harbin as an example, this paper analyzed and studied the climate adaptability technology and excavated the suitable technology for the block to deal with a severe cold climate through research, field measurements, and numerical simulation. The results showed that compared with a certain modern urban area in the city, the Chinese-Baroque historic conservation area had better ability to resist wind and cold. The compact layout of the block could reduce heat loss and keep out the cold by effectively resisting the cold wind from permeating inside. Compared with the T-shaped and L-shaped courtyards, the rectangular courtyard occupies the largest proportion and a rectangular courtyard enclosed by buildings on all sides had better windbreak performance. Furthermore, when the courtyard space was enclosed by four sides and the courtyard width was the same, when the plane aspect ratio was smaller, the maximum wind speed of the inner courtyard was smaller. The squares in the block had a good performance in cold resistance. At the same scale, the higher the degree of enclosure of the square, the lower the internal wind speed. This study will provide a reference for urban planning and architectural design in severe cold regions.
C1 [Jin, Hong; Zhao, Jing; Liu, Siqi; Kang, Jian] Harbin Inst Technol, Heilongjiang Cold Reg Architectural Sci Key Lab, Sch Architecture, Harbin 15000, Heilongjiang, Peoples R China.
   [Kang, Jian] UCL, UCL Inst Environm Design & Engn, Bartlett, Cent House,14 Upper Woburn Pl, London WC1H0NN, England.
C3 Harbin Institute of Technology; University of London; University College
   London
RP Kang, J (corresponding author), Harbin Inst Technol, Heilongjiang Cold Reg Architectural Sci Key Lab, Sch Architecture, Harbin 15000, Heilongjiang, Peoples R China.; Kang, J (corresponding author), UCL, UCL Inst Environm Design & Engn, Bartlett, Cent House,14 Upper Woburn Pl, London WC1H0NN, England.
EM jinhong@hit.edu.cn; jingzhao_hit@163.com; siqiliu@hit.edu.cn;
   j.kang@ucl.ac.uk
RI Kang, J/LKM-1282-2024
OI Kang, Jian/0000-0001-8995-5636
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [51438005]
FX This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China, Grant Number 51438005.
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NR 26
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 11
U2 72
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD OCT
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 10
AR 3374
DI 10.3390/su10103374
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GY4UB
UT WOS:000448559400016
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Laverdière, JP
   Lenz, P
   Nadeau, S
   Depardieu, C
   Isabel, N
   Perron, M
   Beaulieu, J
   Bousquet, J
AF Laverdiere, Jean-Philippe
   Lenz, Patrick
   Nadeau, Simon
   Depardieu, Claire
   Isabel, Nathalie
   Perron, Martin
   Beaulieu, Jean
   Bousquet, Jean
TI Breeding for adaptation to climate change: genomic selection for drought
   response in a white spruce multi-site polycross test
SO EVOLUTIONARY APPLICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; conifer; dendrochronology; drought resistance; multi-trait
   selection; tree rings
ID CANADA BOREAL FOREST; GENETIC-VARIATION; HALF-CENTURY; CHANGE RISKS;
   GROWTH; POPULATIONS; SENSITIVITY; HARDINESS; DYNAMICS; PATTERNS
AB With climate change, increasingly intense and frequent drought episodes will be affecting water availability for boreal tree species, prompting tree breeders and forest managers to consider adaptation to drought stress as a priority in their reforestation efforts. We used a 19-year-old polycross progeny test of the model conifer white spruce (Picea glauca) replicated on two sites affected by distinct drought episodes at different ages to estimate the genetic control and the potential for improvement of drought response in addition to conventional cumulative growth and wood quality traits. Drought response components were measured from dendrochronological signatures matching drought episodes in wood ring increment cores. We found that trees with more vigorous growth during their lifespan resisted better during the current year of a drought episode when the drought had more severe effects. Phenotypic data were also analyzed using genomic prediction (GBLUP) relying on the genomic relationship matrix of multi-locus gene SNP marker information, and conventional analysis (ABLUP) based on validated pedigree information. The accuracy of predicted breeding values for drought response components was marginally lower than that for conventional traits and comparable between GBLUP and ABLUP. Genetic correlations were generally low and nonsignificant between drought response components and conventional traits, except for resistance which was positively correlated to tree height. Heritability estimates for the components of drought response were slightly lower than for conventional traits, but similar single-trait genetic gains could be obtained. Multi-trait genomic selection simulations indicated that it was possible to improve simultaneously for all traits on both sites while sacrificing little on gain in tree height. In a context of rapid climate change, our results suggest that with careful phenotypic assessment, drought response may be considered in multi-trait improvement of white spruce, with accelerated screening of large numbers of candidates and selection at young age with genomic selection.
C1 [Laverdiere, Jean-Philippe; Lenz, Patrick; Depardieu, Claire; Isabel, Nathalie; Perron, Martin; Beaulieu, Jean; Bousquet, Jean] Univ Laval, Inst Syst & Integrat Biol, Canada Res Chair Forest Genom, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
   [Laverdiere, Jean-Philippe; Lenz, Patrick; Depardieu, Claire; Isabel, Nathalie; Perron, Martin; Beaulieu, Jean; Bousquet, Jean] Univ Laval, Ctr Forest Res, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
   [Lenz, Patrick; Nadeau, Simon] Canadian Wood Fibre Ctr, Canadian Forest Serv, Nat Resources Canada, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
   [Isabel, Nathalie] Laurentian Forestry Ctr, Canadian Forest Serv, Nat Resources Canada, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
   [Perron, Martin] Minist Forets Faune & Parc Quebec, Direct Rech Forestiere, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
C3 Laval University; Laval University; Natural Resources Canada; Canadian
   Forest Service; Natural Resources Canada; Canadian Forest Service
RP Laverdière, JP; Bousquet, J (corresponding author), Univ Laval, Inst Syst & Integrat Biol, Canada Res Chair Forest Genom, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.; Laverdière, JP; Bousquet, J (corresponding author), Univ Laval, Ctr Forest Res, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
EM jean-philippe.laverdiere.2@ulaval.ca; Jean.Bousquet@sbf.ulaval.ca
RI Laverdière, Jean-Philippe/HHM-5751-2022; Bousquet, Jean/O-4221-2019;
   Nadeau, Simon/A-9303-2016; Lenz, Patrick/AAE-6233-2020
OI Beaulieu, Jean/0000-0001-5806-7353
FU Genome Quebec [243FOR]; Genome Canada [243FOR]
FX Genome Quebec, Grant/Award Number: 243FOR; Genome Canada, Grant/Award
   Number: 243FOR
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NR 69
TC 24
Z9 24
U1 3
U2 19
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1752-4571
J9 EVOL APPL
JI Evol. Appl.
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 15
IS 3
BP 383
EP 402
DI 10.1111/eva.13348
EA FEB 2022
PG 20
WC Evolutionary Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Evolutionary Biology
GA 0C0CO
UT WOS:000761663400001
PM 35386396
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sánchez-Almodóvar, E
   Olcina-Cantos, J
   Martí-Talavera, J
AF Sanchez-Almodovar, Esther
   Olcina-Cantos, Jorge
   Marti-Talavera, Javier
TI Adaptation Strategies for Flooding Risk from Rainfall Events in
   Southeast Spain: Case Studies from the Bajo Segura, Alicante
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE urban runoff; water management; climate change
ID COAST; VALENCIA; TOURISM
AB The management of runoff during torrential rainfall events is a significant problem in urban areas of southeast Spain. The increase in soil sealing and the occupation of areas prone to flooding have aggravated this problem. Due to this situation, municipal administrations, in collaboration with the concession holder for the supply of water and sewage services, Hidraqua Gestion Integral de Aguas de Levante SA, are committed a more efficient management of non-conventional water resources. An example of this can be found in the municipalities of Rojales, Daya Nueva, and San Fulgencio. These towns are located in the Bajo Segura region of the province of Alicante, where various initiatives have been implemented that break away from the traditional paradigm of rigid infrastructures. These initiatives include green spaces or areas, and sustainable urban drainage systems (SUDS) or nature-based solutions (NBS). This article presents various case studies. Firstly, in the town of Rojales, where several actions are being undertaken to improve the management of wastewater and rainwater and provide a solution to unauthorised dumping, as well as encouraging the use of reclaimed water with the creation of a recreational green area, El Recorral Park. Secondly, in the case of Daya Nueva, the Europa Park constitutes a recreational green area, Europa Park, facilitates runoff drainage by SUDS and NBS. Finally, the creation of a floodable pond in the municipality of San Fulgencio encourages the use of wastewater, thus avoiding the discharge of this non-conventional water resource into the sea. In addition, the pond facilitates the appropriate management of runoff water. The working method in this article has been twofold: firstly, bibliographical references have been consulted from other national and international areas; and secondly, the technical projects in the case studies have been analysed in detail. Several field trips have been made to the selected municipalities, accompanied by the technical personnel in charge of the execution of the projects, to examine the measures adopted. The results show that the implementation of these systems contributes to adapting to climate change and creates more resilient urban spaces.
C1 [Sanchez-Almodovar, Esther] Univ Alicante, Interuniv Inst Geog, Water & Terr Res Grp, San Vicente Raspeig 03690, Spain.
   [Olcina-Cantos, Jorge] Univ Alicante, Dept Reg Geog Anal & Phys Geog, Climatol Lab, San Vicente Raspeig 03690, Spain.
   [Marti-Talavera, Javier] Univ Alicante, Interuniv Inst Geog, Climatol Lab, San Vicente Raspeig 03690, Spain.
C3 Universitat d'Alacant; Universitat d'Alacant; Universitat d'Alacant
RP Sánchez-Almodóvar, E (corresponding author), Univ Alicante, Interuniv Inst Geog, Water & Terr Res Grp, San Vicente Raspeig 03690, Spain.
EM esther.sanchez@ua.es; jorge.olcina@ua.es; jmt25@alu.ua.es
RI Sánchez-Almodóvar, Esther/AGK-2683-2022; Olcina, Jorge/H-2447-2015
OI Marti Talavera, Javier/0000-0002-1624-2843; Sanchez Almodovar,
   Esther/0000-0003-4201-0779; Olcina, Jorge/0000-0002-4846-8126
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NR 61
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 4
U2 21
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JAN
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 2
AR 146
DI 10.3390/w14020146
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA YN3TI
UT WOS:000747183200001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, DJ
   Hu, MP
   Guo, Y
   Dahlgren, RA
AF Chen, Dingjiang
   Hu, Minpeng
   Guo, Yi
   Dahlgren, Randy A.
TI Changes in river water temperature between 1980 and 2012 in Yongan
   watershed, eastern China: Magnitude, drivers and models
SO JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE River; Water temperature; Climate warming; Hydrology; Land use;
   Temperature modeling
ID ANTHROPOGENIC NITROGEN INPUTS; STREAM TEMPERATURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   LAND-USE; VARIABILITY; SENSITIVITY; AIR; BASIN; IMPACTS; REGIME
AB Climate warming is expected to have major impacts on river water quality, water column/hyporheic zone biogeochemistry and aquatic ecosystems. A quantitative understanding of spatio-temporal air (T-a) and water (T-w) temperature dynamics is required to guide river management and to facilitate adaptations to climate change. This study determined the magnitude, drivers and models for increasing T-w in three river segments of the Yongan watershed in eastern China. Over the 1980-2012 period, T-w in the watershed increased by 0.029-0.046 degrees C yr(-1) due to a similar to 0.050 degrees C yr(-1) increase of T-a and changes in local human activities (e.g., increasing developed land and population density and decreasing forest area). A standardized multiple regression model was developed for predicting annual T-w (R-2 = 0.88-0.91) and identifying/partitioning the impact of the principal drivers on increasing T-w:T-a (76 +/- 1%), local human activities (14 +/- 2%), and water discharge (10 +/- 1%). After normalizing water discharge, climate warming and local human activities were estimated to contribute 81-95% and 5-19% of the observed rising T-w, respectively. Models forecast a 0.32-1.76 degrees C increase in T-w by 2050 compared with the 2000-2012 baseline condition based on four future scenarios. Heterogeneity of warming rates existed across seasons and river segments, with the lower flow river and dry season demonstrating a more pronounced response to climate warming and human activities. Rising T-w due to changes in climate, local human activities and hydrology has a considerable potential to aggravate river water quality degradation and coastal water eutrophication in summer. Thus it should be carefully considered in developing watershed management strategies in response to climate change. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Chen, Dingjiang; Hu, Minpeng; Guo, Yi] Zhejiang Univ, Coll Environm & Resource Sci, Hangzhou 310058, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Dingjiang; Hu, Minpeng] Zhejiang Univ, Minist Educ, Key Lab Environm Remediat & Ecol Hlth, Hangzhou 310058, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Guo, Yi] Zhejiang Univ, Zhejiang Prov Key Lab Subtrop Soil & Plant Nutr, Hangzhou 310058, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Dahlgren, Randy A.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Land Air & Water Resources, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
C3 Zhejiang University; Zhejiang University; Zhejiang University;
   University of California System; University of California Davis
RP Chen, DJ (corresponding author), Zhejiang Univ, Coll Environm & Resource Sci, Hangzhou 310058, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
EM chendj@zju.edu.cn
RI Chen, Dingjiang/P-9085-2014; Guo, Yi/N-3558-2018
OI Dahlgren, Randy/0000-0002-8961-875X; Hu, Minpeng/0000-0003-3178-8219
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41371010]; Zhejiang
   Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China [LY13D010002]
FX We thank local the government departments for providing data critical
   for this investigation. This work was supported by the National Natural
   Science Foundation of China (41371010) and Zhejiang Provincial Natural
   Science Foundation of China (LY13D010002).
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NR 44
TC 42
Z9 48
U1 1
U2 49
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0022-1694
EI 1879-2707
J9 J HYDROL
JI J. Hydrol.
PD FEB
PY 2016
VL 533
BP 191
EP 199
DI 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2015.12.005
PG 9
WC Engineering, Civil; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Geology; Water Resources
GA DD7EJ
UT WOS:000370086200016
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, XB
   Wang, SQ
   Folberth, C
   Skalsky, R
   Li, H
   Liu, YY
   Balkovic, J
AF Wang, Xiaobo
   Wang, Shaoqiang
   Folberth, Christian
   Skalsky, Rastislav
   Li, Hui
   Liu, Yuanyuan
   Balkovic, Juraj
TI Limiting global warming to 2 °C benefits building climate resilience in
   rice-wheat systems in India through crop calendar management
SO AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Climate resilience; Rice-wheat system; Crop calendar;
   Planting date; Crop model
ID MAJOR CROPS; YIELD; TEMPERATURE; ADAPTATION; GROWTH; MAIZE; DATE
AB CONTEXT: Rice-wheat rotation system (RWS) is the most important food production system in South Asia and contributes approximately 50% of the total food consumed in India. Building climate resilience of RWS in the context of global warming is critical to sustainably feeding the ever-increasing population in India. Prior research has shown a large potential for climate change adaptation in rice and wheat production through cropping calendar adjustment, but the climate resilience of rice-wheat systems remains elusive.OBJECTIVE: The study aims to project coupled changes in the growing seasons of rice and wheat in RWS under global warming, and evaluate climate resilience of RWS productivity in India through crop calendar adjustment.METHODS: We combined an improved Environmental Policy Integrated Climate model with satellite remote sensing data to investigate the coupling of rice and wheat growing seasons in RWS in India. Then, we shifted crop calendars in RWS to simulate optimal planting dates and potential yield changes of rice and wheat under contrasting global warming scenarios.RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS: We show that farmers will face a yield trade-off between monsoon rice and dry season wheat under high greenhouse gas emission scenarios (4 degrees C warming by the end of the century) in the Indo-Gangetic Plains (IGP) due to a tighter coupling of crop growing seasons in RWS. Early planting for both monsoon rice and dry-season wheat is recommended in the current climate, but the strategy does not apply to future climate change scenarios in the IGP. Limiting global warming below 2 degrees C by the end of the century is likely to improve RWS productivity by 14% in irrigated systems and 21% in rainfed systems, and keep sufficient maneuvering space for resilient planting strategies in the future.SIGNIFICANCE: Our analysis emphasizes that failure to fulfill the pledges of the Paris Agreement will result in not only higher crop damage but also more challenging climate adaptation planning in RWS in India.
C1 [Wang, Xiaobo; Wang, Shaoqiang; Liu, Yuanyuan] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Ecosyst Network Observat & Modeling, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Xiaobo; Folberth, Christian; Skalsky, Rastislav; Liu, Yuanyuan; Balkovic, Juraj] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, Biodivers & Nat Resources Program, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Wang, Xiaobo; Wang, Shaoqiang] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Shaoqiang; Li, Hui] China Univ Geosci, Sch Geog & Informat Engn, Wuhan 430074, Peoples R China.
   [Skalsky, Rastislav] Natl Agr & Food Ctr, Soil Sci & Conservat Res Inst, Bratislava 82109, Slovakia.
   [Balkovic, Juraj] Comenius Univ, Fac Nat Sci, Bratislava 84215, Slovakia.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS; International Institute for Applied Systems
   Analysis (IIASA); Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese
   Academy of Sciences, CAS; China University of Geosciences; Slovak
   Agricultural Research Center; Comenius University Bratislava
RP Wang, SQ (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Ecosyst Network Observat & Modeling, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
EM sqwang@igsnrr.ac.cn
RI liu, yuanyuan/ABE-6458-2021; Wang, Xiaobo/AAD-5858-2019; Wang,
   Shengguang/J-9471-2012
OI Wang, Xiaobo/0000-0003-0708-6030
FU National Natural Science Founda- tion of China [31,861,143,015,
   32,301,393]
FX This research was funded by the National Natural Science Founda- tion of
   China (Project Nos. 31,861,143,015 and 32,301,393) .
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NR 54
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 9
U2 15
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0308-521X
EI 1873-2267
J9 AGR SYST
JI Agric. Syst.
PD JAN
PY 2024
VL 213
AR 103806
DI 10.1016/j.agsy.2023.103806
EA NOV 2023
PG 14
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA Z4JD9
UT WOS:001111745600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Goosen, H
   de Groot-Reichwein, MAM
   Masselink, L
   Koekoek, A
   Swart, R
   Bessembinder, J
   Witte, JMP
   Stuyt, L
   Blom-Zandstra, G
   Immerzeel, W
AF Goosen, H.
   de Groot-Reichwein, M. A. M.
   Masselink, L.
   Koekoek, A.
   Swart, R.
   Bessembinder, J.
   Witte, J. M. P.
   Stuyt, L.
   Blom-Zandstra, G.
   Immerzeel, W.
TI Climate Adaptation Services for the Netherlands: an operational approach
   to support spatial adaptation planning
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate services; Adaptation; Spatial planning; Climate impacts;
   Visualisation
ID DECISION-SUPPORT; DESIGN; GAP
AB There is a growing availability of climate change information, offered to scientists and policy makers through climate services. However, climate services are not well taken up by the policy-making and planning community. Climate services focus on primary impacts of climate change, e.g., the disclosure of precipitation and temperature data, and this seems insufficient in meeting their needs. In this paper, we argue that, in order to reach the spatial planning community, climate services should take on a wider perspective by translating climate data to policy-relevant indicators and by offering support in the design of adaptation strategies. We argue there should be more focus on translating consequences of climate change to land-use claims and subsequently discuss the validity, consequences and implications of these claims with stakeholders, so they can play a role in spatial planning processes where much of the climate adaptation takes place. The term Climate Adaptation Services is introduced as being a stepwise approach supporting the assessment of vulnerability in a wider perspective and include the design and appraisal of adaptation strategies in a multi-stakeholder setting. We developed the Climate Adaptation Atlas and the Climate Ateliers as tools within the Climate Adaptation Services approach to support decision-making and planning processes. In this paper, we describe the different steps of our approach and report how some of the challenges were addressed.
C1 [Goosen, H.; de Groot-Reichwein, M. A. M.; Swart, R.; Stuyt, L.] Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, Alterra, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Masselink, L.] Wageningen Univ, NL-6700 AP Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Koekoek, A.] Geodan BV, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Bessembinder, J.] KNMI, De Bilt, Netherlands.
   [Witte, J. M. P.] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Blom-Zandstra, G.] Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Immerzeel, W.] FutureWater, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Wageningen University & Research;
   Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute; Vrije Universiteit
   Amsterdam; Wageningen University & Research
RP Goosen, H (corresponding author), Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, Alterra, Droevendaalsesteeg 3, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
EM Hasse.Goosen@wur.nl
RI Immerzeel, Walter/E-2489-2012
OI Immerzeel, Walter/0000-0002-2010-9543; Goosen,
   Hasse/0000-0002-8749-2874; Swart, Rob/0000-0002-1563-1150
FU Dutch research program Climate changes Spatial Planning (CcSP); Dutch
   research program Knowledge for Climate (KfC)
FX The development of the Climate Adaptation Atlas and the Climate Ateliers
   was funded by the Dutch research programs Climate changes Spatial
   Planning (CcSP) and Knowledge for Climate (KfC). To consolidate and to
   continue the development and innovation of Climate Adaptation Services
   in October 2012, the foundation Climate Adaptation Services 4 was
   established. The foundation brings together several Dutch research
   institutes like Alterra, Deltares, KNMI, Geodan and TNO and aims at
   creating a common knowledge portal. An important goal of the foundation
   is to support the adaptation process by assessing different adaptation
   strategies for different regions.
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   [No title captured]
   [No title captured]
   [No title captured]
   [No title captured]
NR 53
TC 53
Z9 59
U1 1
U2 49
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2014
VL 14
IS 3
SI SI
BP 1035
EP 1048
DI 10.1007/s10113-013-0513-8
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AH3OX
UT WOS:000336035100015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, YS
   Sun, ZF
   Zhou, YW
AF Chen, Yusheng
   Sun, Zhaofa
   Zhou, Yongwei
TI Cultural rice fields in the wave of climate change: a multilateral
   evolutionary game framework for adaptive management of agricultural
   heritage systems
SO HERITAGE SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Agricultural heritage systems; Adaptive management; Climate change;
   Evolutionary game theory; Delay differential equations (DDE)
AB Agricultural Heritage Systems (AHS) are pivotal in preserving rich agricultural production experience and traditional culture, as well as in maintaining biodiversity and promoting sustainable development in agriculture and rural economies. However, climate change poses significant threats to these systems, such as ecological degradation, biodiversity loss, and shifts in agricultural production patterns. This study, grounded in theories of information asymmetry and bounded rationality, constructs evolutionary game models for adaptive management of AHS under market mechanisms and government guidance. By employing stability analysis and numerical simulation with Delay Differential Equations (DDE) that consider historical delays, and through sensitivity analysis, this research delves into the strategic evolutionary outcomes of stakeholders under various scenarios. It aims to provide theoretical insights and policy recommendations for the dynamic protection and adaptive management of AHS in the face of climate change. The findings indicate that the public goods nature of AHS, alongside externalities and information asymmetry, leads to market failure. Sole reliance on autonomous actions by farmers and meteorological departments is insufficient for optimal resource allocation and effective protection. Government intervention, through regulatory and incentive measures, can effectively mitigate market failures and steer adaptive management of AHS towards efficiency and sustainability. Moreover, the study identifies key factors for adaptive management, such as enhancing stakeholders' initial willingness to participate, reducing the costs of adapting to climate change, optimizing cooperative benefit distribution mechanisms, and increasing the profitability of resource cooperation. Sensitivity analysis of government subsidies and penalty mechanisms further reveals the complex and critical role these policy tools play in fostering stakeholder engagement. Based on these findings, the study recommends enhancing initial participation willingness, controlling transformation costs to alleviate economic burdens, optimizing benefit distribution mechanisms to boost cooperative resource profitability, and establishing dynamic subsidy and penalty mechanisms for optimal resource allocation. The theoretical and practical contributions of this research lie in applying theories of information asymmetry and bounded rationality to the adaptive management of AHS under climate change, enriching the theoretical framework in this field, and providing scientific decision-making support for policymakers. By demonstrating an effective path for AHS protection through combined government and market mechanisms in the context of global climate change, this research holds significant theoretical and practical implications for enhancing the efficiency of adaptive management of AHS, protecting, and inheriting valuable agricultural cultural heritage.
C1 [Chen, Yusheng; Sun, Zhaofa; Zhou, Yongwei] Ocean Univ China, Sch Management, Qingdao 266100, Peoples R China.
C3 Ocean University of China
RP Chen, YS (corresponding author), Ocean Univ China, Sch Management, Qingdao 266100, Peoples R China.
EM 2010019@ouc.edu.cn
RI Sun, zhaofa/KBQ-9428-2024
CR Adachi Shimpei., 2007, Asian and African Studies, V6, P173
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NR 24
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 18
U2 18
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 2050-7445
J9 HERIT SCI
JI Herit. Sci.
PD JUL 16
PY 2024
VL 12
IS 1
AR 243
DI 10.1186/s40494-024-01348-5
PG 20
WC Humanities, Multidisciplinary; Chemistry, Analytical; Materials Science,
   Multidisciplinary; Spectroscopy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Arts & Humanities - Other Topics; Chemistry; Materials Science;
   Spectroscopy
GA YM7G6
UT WOS:001268965100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Li, M
   Zhang, Y
   Yang, YS
   Wang, TX
   Wu, C
   Zhang, XJ
AF Li, Ming
   Zhang, Yi
   Yang, Yongsheng
   Wang, Tongxin
   Wu, Chu
   Zhang, Xiujuan
TI Prediction of Historical, Current, and Future Configuration of Tibetan
   Medicinal Herb <i>Gymnadenia orchidis</i> Based on the Optimized MaxEnt
   in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau
SO PLANTS-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE medicinal plants; maxent model; driving factors; climate change;
   suitability
ID MODEL; PRECIPITATION; DISTRIBUTIONS; RICHNESS
AB Climate change plays a pivotal role in shaping the shifting patterns of plant distribution, and gaining insights into how medicinal plants in the plateau region adapt to climate change will be instrumental in safeguarding the rich biodiversity of the highlands. Gymnosia orchidis Lindl. (G. orchidis) is a valuable Tibetan medicinal resource with significant medicinal, ecological, and economic value. However, the growth of G. orchidis is severely constrained by stringent natural conditions, leading to a drastic decline in its resources. Therefore, it is crucial to study the suitable habitat areas of G. orchidis to facilitate future artificial cultivation and maintain ecological balance. In this study, we investigated the suitable zones of G. orchidis based on 79 occurrence points in the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) and 23 major environmental variables, including climate, topography, and soil type. We employed the Maximum Entropy model (MaxEnt) to simulate and predict the spatial distribution and configuration changes in G. orchidis during different time periods, including the last interglacial (LIG), the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM), the Mid-Holocene (MH), the present, and future scenarios (2041-2060 and 2061-2080) under three different climate scenarios (SSP126, SSP370, and SSP585). Our results indicated that annual precipitation (Bio12, 613-2466 mm) and mean temperature of the coldest quarter (Bio11, -5.8-8.5 degrees C) were the primary factors influencing the suitable habitat of G. orchidis, with a cumulative contribution of 78.5%. The precipitation and temperature during the driest season had the most significant overall impact. Under current climate conditions, the suitable areas of G. orchidis covered approximately 63.72 x 104/km2, encompassing Yunnan, Gansu, Sichuan, and parts of Xizang provinces, with the highest suitability observed in the Hengduan, Yunlin, and Himalayan mountain regions. In the past, the suitable area of G. orchidis experienced significant changes during the Mid-Holocene, including variations in the total area and centroid migration direction. In future scenarios, the suitable habitat of G. orchidis is projected to expand significantly under SSP370 (30.33-46.19%), followed by SSP585 (1.41-22.3%), while contraction is expected under SSP126. Moreover, the centroids of suitable areas exhibited multidirectional movement, with the most extensive displacement observed under SSP585 (100.38 km2). This study provides a theoretical foundation for the conservation of biodiversity and endangered medicinal plants in the QTP.
C1 [Li, Ming; Zhang, Yi; Wang, Tongxin; Wu, Chu; Zhang, Xiujuan] Yangtze Univ, Coll Hort & Gardening, Jingzhou 434025, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Yongsheng] Chinese Acad Sci, Northwest Inst Plateau Biol, Key Lab Adaptat & Evolut Plateau Biota, Xining 810008, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Yongsheng] Chinese Acad Sci, Northwest Inst Plateau Biol, Key Lab Restorat Ecol Cold Reg Qinghai Prov, Xining 810008, Peoples R China.
C3 Yangtze University; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Chinese Academy of
   Sciences
RP Zhang, XJ (corresponding author), Yangtze Univ, Coll Hort & Gardening, Jingzhou 434025, Peoples R China.
EM ysyang@nwipb.cas.cn; wuchu08@yangtzeu.cn; zxj510@yangtzeu.edu.cn
RI LI, Ming/KLC-0625-2024; Yang, Yang/A-2944-2011; LI, Ming/KHD-2028-2024
OI LI, Ming/0009-0005-7093-0793; Yongsheng, Yang/0000-0001-7972-1377
FU National Science Foundation of China
FX No Statement Available
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NR 60
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 32
U2 49
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
SN 2223-7747
J9 PLANTS-BASEL
JI Plants-Basel
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 13
IS 5
AR 645
DI 10.3390/plants13050645
PG 16
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA KY0G2
UT WOS:001183402900001
PM 38475491
OA Green Published, gold
HC Y
HP N
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Li, HY
   Liu, GH
   Han, CT
   Yang, Y
   Chen, RS
AF Li, Hongyuan
   Liu, Guohua
   Han, Chuntan
   Yang, Yong
   Chen, Rensheng
TI Quantifying the Trends and Variations in the Frost-Free Period and the
   Number of Frost Days across China under Climate Change Using ERA5-Land
   Reanalysis Dataset
SO REMOTE SENSING
LA English
DT Article
DE frost-free period; frost days; ERA5-Land; climate change; agricultural
   production
ID FREE SEASON; VARIABILITY; TEMPERATURE
AB Understanding the spatio-temporal variations in the frost-free period (FFP) and the number of frost days (FD) is beneficial to reduce the harmful effects of climate change on agricultural production and enhancing agricultural adaptation. However, the spatio-temporal variations in FFP and FD and their response to climate change remain unclear across China. To investigate the impact of climate change on FFP and FD, the trends and variations in FFP and FD across China from 1950 to 2020 were quantified using ERA5-Land, a reanalysis dataset with high spatial and temporal resolution. The results showed that ERA5-Land has good applicability in quantifying the trends and variations in FFP and FD across China under climate change. The spatial distribution of multi-year average FFP and FD across China showed significant latitudinal zonality and altitude dependence, i.e., FFP decreased with increasing latitude and altitude, while FD increased with increasing latitude and altitude. As a result of climate warming across China, the FFP showed an increasing trend with an increase rate of 1.25 d/10a and the maximum increasing rate of FFP in the individual region was 6.2 d/10a, while the FD showed a decreasing trend with a decrease rate of 1.41 d/10a and the maximum decreasing rate of FD in the individual region was -6.7 d/10a. Among the five major climate zones in China, the subtropical monsoon climate zone (SUMZ) with the greatest increasing rate of 1.73 d/10a in FFP, while the temperate monsoon climate zone (TEMZ) with the greatest decreasing rate of -1.72 d/10a in FD. In addition, the coefficient of variation (C-v) of FFP showed greater variability at higher altitudes, while the C-v of FD showed greater variability at lower latitudes in southern China. Without considering the adaptation to temperature of crops, a general increase in FFP and a general decrease in FD were both beneficial to agricultural production in terms of FFP and FD promoting a longer growing period and reducing frost damage on crops. This study provides a comprehensive understanding of the trends and variations in FFP and FD under climate change, which is of great scientific significance for the adjustment of the agricultural production layout to adapt to climate change in China.
C1 [Li, Hongyuan; Han, Chuntan; Yang, Yong; Chen, Rensheng] Chinese Acad Sci, Northwest Inst Ecoenvironm & Resources, Qilian Alpine Ecol & Hydrol Res Stn, Lanzhou 730000, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Hongyuan; Han, Chuntan] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Guohua] Hengyang Normal Univ, Coll Geog & Tourism, Hengyang 421000, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Rensheng] Northwest Univ, Coll Urban & Environm Sci, Xian 710000, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of
   Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS; Hengyang Normal University; Northwest
   University Xi'an
RP Chen, RS (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Northwest Inst Ecoenvironm & Resources, Qilian Alpine Ecol & Hydrol Res Stn, Lanzhou 730000, Peoples R China.
EM lihongyuan@nieer.ac.cn; lgh1990@lzb.ac.cn; hancht@lzb.ac.cn;
   yy177@lzb.ac.cn; crs2008@lzb.ac.cn
RI Liu, Guohua/A-8327-2013
OI Li, Hongyuan/0000-0001-6305-0708
FU National Natural Sciences Foundation of China [41971041]; Joint Research
   Project of Three-River Headwaters National Park, Chinese Academy of
   Sciences; People's Government of Qinghai Province [LHZX-2020-11];
   Sciences and Technology Plan Project of Gansu Province [21JR7RA056];
   Open Research Fund of the National Cryosphere Desert Data Center
   [2021kf09]
FX This research was funded by the National Natural Sciences Foundation of
   China (41971041), the Joint Research Project of Three-River Headwaters
   National Park, Chinese Academy of Sciences and the People's Government
   of Qinghai Province (LHZX-2020-11), the Sciences and Technology Plan
   Project of Gansu Province (21JR7RA056) and the Open Research Fund of the
   National Cryosphere Desert Data Center (2021kf09).
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NR 85
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 8
U2 77
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2072-4292
J9 REMOTE SENS-BASEL
JI Remote Sens.
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 10
AR 2400
DI 10.3390/rs14102400
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Remote Sensing;
   Imaging Science & Photographic Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Remote Sensing; Imaging
   Science & Photographic Technology
GA 1R6OJ
UT WOS:000803486900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ray, A
   Xu, K
   Bayomi, N
   Fernandez, JE
AF Ray, Anushka
   Xu, Katherine
   Bayomi, Norhan
   Fernandez, John E.
TI CLIM-SEG: A generalizable segmentation model for heat and flood risk
   mapping
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change risk; Climate adaptation; Segmentation; AI
ID SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; HEALTH-RISK; MORTALITY; EXPOSURE; HAZARD; INDEX;
   URBANIZATION; TEMPERATURE; MANAGEMENT; VEGETATION
AB With the escalating impact of climate change coupled with increased urbanization, many cities will experience extreme heat events and intense flooding. Current modeling approaches often fail to incorporate high-resolution, frequently updated data sources, such as aerial imagery from web mapping platforms, limiting their effectiveness in identifying areas at risk. To address this gap, the paper presents CLIM-SEG, a novel framework for high-resolution urban heat and flood risk assessment, addressing critical gaps in current climate risk modeling. This framework integrates semantic segmentation of aerial imagery with a weighted sum approach that integrates environmental, socioeconomic, and building data to provide comprehensive risk evaluations at the census tract level. CLIM-SEG synthesize land cover data with hazard and vulnerability factors, producing risk scores ranging from 0 to 1. This low-cost and efficient framework can enable urban planners to prioritize resources for flood mitigation and heat adaptation, addressing the limitations of current approaches and contributing to the field of urban planning and climate change adaptation. The propoosed methodology incorporates a custom-curated dataset of 545 aerial images, including 145 manually annotated segmentation maps, to fine-tune advanced semantic segmentation models. The optimized Segmenter model achieves a pixel accuracy of 97.85% and an Intersection over Union (IoU) of 0.9578 for key urban features, significantly outperforming baseline models. Boston is selected to represent an ideal representation for both heat and flood risk, as the city experiences severe urban heat islands, and is susceptible to coastal and riverine flooding, with over 11,000 structures expected to be affected by 2070 due to sea level rise and increased precipitation. Results from flood and heat risk models indicate that census tracts in South End have the highest flood risk, with a weighted score value of 0.825, while census tracts in the Fenway-Kenmore neighborhood show the highest heat risk, with a score of 0.991. Both of these results have also been verified with other heat and flood risk mapping sources for Boston. The proposed framework of CLIM-SEG not only addresses the challenges faced by Boston but also has the potential to be scaled to other urban areas dealing with the impacts of climate change, providing a valuable tool for risk assessment and decision-making in the face of a changing climate.
C1 [Ray, Anushka; Xu, Katherine; Bayomi, Norhan; Fernandez, John E.] MIT, Urban Metab Grp, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
C3 Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
RP Bayomi, N (corresponding author), MIT, Urban Metab Grp, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA.
EM nourhan@mit.edu
RI Bayomi, Norhan/AGD-8833-2022
OI /0000-0002-6903-5469
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NR 139
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2024
VL 46
AR 100654
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2024.100654
EA OCT 2024
PG 29
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA J2I6N
UT WOS:001335359300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Le, DV
AF Le, Duc Vien
TI Vietnamese Folk Architecture: Regional Architecture based on Climatic
   Adaptation
SO DESIGN JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE climatic adaptation; contemporary architectural design; regional
   architecture; Vietnamese folk architecture
AB OVERVIEW Facing the challenges of an ever more globalized world of architectural convergence, studies of the regional architecture can serve as a refreshing counterpoint that brings essential insight and more down-to-earth perspective. The regionalism in architecture was reflected in many aspects, including the aspects of climatic adaptation in recent architecture research and implementations. This study takes the Vietnamese folk architecture as the research object and proceeds with in-depth research on the local climate and its influence on architectural characteristics, to understand the means of climatic adaptation, and provide an effective guideline for the development of Vietnamese contemporary architectural design.
C1 [Le, Duc Vien] Southeast Univ, Sch Architecture, 2 Sipailou, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
C3 Southeast University - China
RP Le, DV (corresponding author), Southeast Univ, Sch Architecture, 2 Sipailou, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
EM arch.ducvienle@gmail.com
RI LE, Duc Vien/D-2184-2017
OI LE, Duc Vien/0000-0002-4576-5096
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NR 22
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 20
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1460-6925
EI 1756-3062
J9 DES J
JI Des. J.
PY 2018
VL 21
IS 6
BP 855
EP 862
DI 10.1080/14606925.2018.1525016
PG 8
WC Art
WE Arts &amp; Humanities Citation Index (A&amp;HCI)
SC Art
GA HQ0EH
UT WOS:000462065400006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Watanabe, T
AF Watanabe, Tsugihiro
TI How Do Irrigation and Drainage Play an Important Role in Climate Change
   Adaptation?<SUP>†</SUP>
SO IRRIGATION AND DRAINAGE
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT 22nd International Congress of the
   International-Commission-on-Irrigation-and-Drainage (ICID) on Securing
   Water for Food and Rural Community under Climate Change
CY SEP, 2014
CL Gwangju, SOUTH KOREA
SP Int Commiss Irrigat & Drainage
DE climate change; impact assessment; adaptation strategy; extreme events;
   irrigation and drainage management; changement climatique; evaluation de
   l'impact; strategie d'adaptation; evenements extremes; gestion de
   l'irrigation et du drainage
AB The 22nd International Congress on Irrigation and Drainage with the main theme 'Securing Water for Food and Rural Community under Climate Change' was held in September 2014 in Gwangju, Korea. Under this theme, Congress Question 58 'How do Irrigation and Drainage Play an Important Role in Climate Change Adaptation?' was raised. This paper summarizes the discussions and results of 48 papers and 27 posters accepted under this question. This overview confirms the role of irrigation and drainage management as intervention to mitigate the impacts of climate change, and consequent extreme climate events have to be factored into all decision-making processes. It also highlights that particular attention should be paid to the uncertainty in climate change assessment and that the assessment is expected to be more dependable with the development of better analysis methods and a greater availability of reliable climate data and future scenarios. At this stage, it is very hard to do an integrated impact assessment, which covers the whole agricultural and hydrological process, including all scales and aspects such as on-farm to basin, crop growth to farming system, production to environment, etc. Therefore, each sub-process is to be evaluated and accumulation of its outcomes and cases promoted. Copyright (c) 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
   Resume Le 22(eme) Congres international des irrigations et du drainage dont le theme principal etait Garantir l'eau pour l'alimentation et communaute rurale dans le contexte du changement climatique' a eu lieu en septembre 2014 a Gwangju, en Coree. Sous ce theme, la question 58s'intitulait Comment est-ce que l'irrigation et le drainage jouent un role important dans l'adaptation au changement climatique?' Le present document resume les conclusions et les discussions resultats de 48 communications et 27 posters acceptes dans le cadre de cette question. Ce tour d'horizon confirme le role de la gestion de l'irrigation et du drainage pour attenuer les impacts du changement climatique, et montre que les evenements climatiques extremes ont a etre pris en compte dans tous les processus de prise de decision. Il souligne egalement qu'une attention particuliere doit etre portee aux incertitudes de l'evaluation du changement climatique, et que cette evaluation devrait etre plus fiable avec le developpement de meilleures methodes d'analyse et une plus grande disponibilite de donnees climatiques fiables et de scenarios prospectifs. A ce stade, il est tres difficile de faire une evaluation integree de l'impact, qui couvre l'ensemble du processus agricole et hydrologique, a toutes les echelles et pour tous les aspects, de l'exploitation agricole au bassin hydrographique, du developpement vegetal aux systemes d'exploitation agricole, de la production a l'environnement, etc. Par consequent, chaque sous-processus est a evaluer, et la consolidation des resultats et de cas doit etre encouragee.
C1 [Watanabe, Tsugihiro] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Global Environm Studies, Sakyo Ku, Kyoto 6068501, Japan.
C3 Kyoto University
RP Watanabe, T (corresponding author), Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Global Environm Studies, Sakyo Ku, Kyoto 6068501, Japan.
EM nabe@kais.kyoto-u.ac.jp
FU Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16H02763] Funding Source: KAKEN
CR Field CB, 2014, CLIMATE CHANGE 2014: IMPACTS, ADAPTATION, AND VULNERABILITY, PT A: GLOBAL AND SECTORAL ASPECTS, P1
   Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), 2013, CILM CHANG 2013 PHYS
   International Commission on Irrigation and Drainage (ICID), 2014, 22 ICID C
   Watanabe T, 2014, 22 ICID C SEPT GWANG
   Watanabe T, 2009, PADDY WATER ENVIRON, V7, P313, DOI 10.1007/s10333-009-0179-5
NR 5
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 20
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1531-0353
EI 1531-0361
J9 IRRIG DRAIN
JI Irrig. Drain.
PD APR
PY 2016
VL 65
IS 2
SI SI
BP 189
EP 196
DI 10.1002/ird.1980
PG 8
WC Agronomy; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Water Resources
GA DK1RW
UT WOS:000374692600006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nicolas, SD
   Péros, JP
   Lacombe, T
   Launay, A
   Le Paslier, MC
   Bérard, A
   Mangin, B
   Valière, S
   Martins, F
   Le Cunff, L
   Laucou, V
   Bacilieri, R
   Dereeper, A
   Chatelet, P
   This, P
   Doligez, A
AF Nicolas, Stephane D.
   Peros, Jean-Pierre
   Lacombe, Thierry
   Launay, Amandine
   Le Paslier, Marie-Christine
   Berard, Aurelie
   Mangin, Brigitte
   Valiere, Sophie
   Martins, Frederic
   Le Cunff, Loic
   Laucou, Valerie
   Bacilieri, Roberto
   Dereeper, Alexis
   Chatelet, Philippe
   This, Patrice
   Doligez, Agnes
TI Genetic diversity, linkage disequilibrium and power of a large grapevine
   (<i>Vitis vinifera</i> L) diversity panel newly designed for association
   studies
SO BMC PLANT BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Vitis; Association panel; Linkage disequilibrium; Power; Genome-wide
   association studies; SSR; SNP; sylvestris; Vassal collection; Haplotype;
   Kinship
ID MARKER-ASSISTED SELECTION; GENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION; CULTIVATED
   GRAPEVINE; POPULATION-STRUCTURE; HAPLOTYPE DIVERSITY; STATISTICAL POWER;
   CORE COLLECTIONS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; STABLE QTLS; TRAITS
AB Background: As for many crops, new high-quality grapevine varieties requiring less pesticide and adapted to climate change are needed. In perennial species, breeding is a long process which can be speeded up by gaining knowledge about quantitative trait loci linked to agronomic traits variation. However, due to the long juvenile period of these species, establishing numerous highly recombinant populations for high resolution mapping is both costly and time-consuming. Genome wide association studies in germplasm panels is an alternative method of choice, since it allows identifying the main quantitative trait loci with high resolution by exploiting past recombination events between cultivars. Such studies require adequate panel design to represent most of the available genetic and phenotypic diversity. Assessing linkage disequilibrium extent and panel power is also needed to determine the marker density required for association studies.
   Results: Starting from the largest grapevine collection worldwide maintained in Vassal (France), we designed a diversity panel of 279 cultivars with limited relatedness, reflecting the low structuration in three genetic pools resulting from different uses (table vs wine) and geographical origin (East vs West), and including the major founders of modern cultivars. With 20 simple sequence repeat markers and five quantitative traits, we showed that our panel adequately captured most of the genetic and phenotypic diversity existing within the entire Vassal collection. To assess linkage disequilibrium extent and panel power, we genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms: 372 over four genomic regions and 129 distributed over the whole genome. Linkage disequilibrium, measured by correlation corrected for kinship, reached 0.2 for a physical distance between 9 and 458 Kb depending on genetic pool and genomic region, with varying size of linkage disequilibrium blocks. This panel achieved reasonable power to detect associations between traits with high broad-sense heritability (> 0.7) and causal loci with intermediate allelic frequency and strong effect (explaining > 10 % of total variance).
   Conclusions: Our association panel constitutes a new, highly valuable resource for genetic association studies in grapevine, and deserves dissemination to diverse field and greenhouse trials to gain more insight into the genetic control of many agronomic traits and their interaction with the environment.
C1 [Nicolas, Stephane D.; Peros, Jean-Pierre; Lacombe, Thierry; Launay, Amandine; Laucou, Valerie; Bacilieri, Roberto; Dereeper, Alexis; Chatelet, Philippe; This, Patrice; Doligez, Agnes] INRA, UMR AGAP, F-34060 Montpellier, France.
   [Nicolas, Stephane D.] Univ Paris Saclay, Univ Paris 11, AgroParisTech, CNRS,GQE Moulon,INRA, F-91190 Gif Sur Yvette, France.
   [Le Paslier, Marie-Christine; Berard, Aurelie] INRA, CNG, CEA, EPGV US1279,IG, F-91057 Evry, France.
   [Mangin, Brigitte] INRA, UR MIAT, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Valiere, Sophie; Martins, Frederic] INRA, Plateforme Genom, F-31326 Castanet Tolosan, France.
   [Martins, Frederic] INSERM, UMR1048, F-31432 Toulouse, France.
   [Le Cunff, Loic] IFV, UMT Genovigne, F-34060 Montpellier, France.
   [Dereeper, Alexis] IRD, UMR IPME, F-34394 Montpellier 5, France.
C3 INRAE; Universite de Montpellier; Centre National de la Recherche
   Scientifique (CNRS); AgroParisTech; Universite Paris Saclay; INRAE;
   Universite Paris Saclay; INRAE; CEA; INRAE; INRAE; Institut National de
   la Sante et de la Recherche Medicale (Inserm); Institut de Recherche
   pour le Developpement (IRD)
RP Doligez, A (corresponding author), INRA, UMR AGAP, F-34060 Montpellier, France.
EM doligez@supagro.inra.fr
RI Nicolas, Stéphane/D-4980-2009; DOLIGEZ, Agnes/HGE-7811-2022; Nicolas,
   Stephane/N-6886-2017
OI Bacilieri, Roberto/0000-0002-3342-362X; Doligez,
   Agnes/0000-0002-3159-5903; Martins, Frederic/0000-0002-2990-2636;
   Nicolas, Stephane/0000-0003-0758-9930
FU DLVitis program - French ANR (Agence National de la Recherche)
   [ANR-08-GENM-02]; French CNIV (Comite National Interprofessionnel des
   Vins d'Appellation d'Origine); SNPGrapMap program - INRA; INRA
   postdoctoral fellowship; INRA
FX This study was supported by: the DLVitis program (project
   ANR-08-GENM-02) funded by the French ANR (Agence National de la
   Recherche) and the French CNIV (Comite National Interprofessionnel des
   Vins d'Appellation d'Origine); the SNPGrapMap program funded by INRA. SN
   was supported by an INRA postdoctoral fellowship. TL's contribution to
   this study was part of his PhD thesis funded by INRA. We thank the INPT
   (Institut National Polytechnique de Toulouse) genomic platform of
   Genotoul in Toulouse for technical support in the acquisition of
   genotypic data; the EPGV (Etude du Polymorphisme des Genomes Vegetaux)
   group in Evry: Dominique Brunel for discussion, Aurelie Chauveau and
   Remi Bounon for performing amplicon production and Sanger sequencing;
   the CNG (Centre National de Genotypage) in Evry for providing access to
   their robotics and ABI3730 sequencers; the INRA "Domaine de Vassal"
   Grape Germplasm Repository for collection maintenance and phenotyping;
   Vincent Thareau for designing part of the sequencing primers; Muriel
   Latreille, Audrey Weber and Juliette Goarrin for helping with DNA
   extraction; David Desrousseaux for his help in designing the kinship
   estimation selection method; Tristan Marie-Huard for the R script to
   compute power; Timothee Flutre for useful comments on the manuscript;
   the two anonymous reviewers for their useful comments on a first version
   of this manuscript.
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NR 118
TC 70
Z9 74
U1 1
U2 66
PU BMC
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1471-2229
J9 BMC PLANT BIOL
JI BMC Plant Biol.
PD MAR 22
PY 2016
VL 16
AR 74
DI 10.1186/s12870-016-0754-z
PG 19
WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences
GA DH0SI
UT WOS:000372494000007
PM 27005772
OA Green Submitted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Xiong, W
   Holman, I
   Conway, D
   Lin, E
   Li, Y
AF Xiong, Wei
   Holman, Ian
   Conway, Declan
   Lin, Erda
   Li, Yue
TI A crop model cross calibration for use in regional climate impacts
   studies
SO ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
LA English
DT Article
DE calibration; crop model; climate change
ID CROP/SOIL SIMULATION-MODEL; ASSESS METHANE EMISSIONS; RICE PRODUCTION;
   GENETIC COEFFICIENTS; AGRICULTURAL IMPACTS; SOYBEAN PERFORMANCE; CHANGE
   SCENARIOS; GIS TECHNIQUES; CERES-RICE; YIELDS
AB Crop simulation models are widely used to assess the impacts of and adaptation to climate change in relation to agricultural production. However, a substantial mismatch often exists between the spatial and temporal scale of available data and the requirements of crop simulation models. Conventional model calibration methods which concentrate on a model's performance at plot scale cannot be used for large scale regional simulation (especially for climate change impacts assessments), given the limited observed data and the iterative calibration needed. One primary purpose of regional simulation is to predict the spatial yield variation and temporal yield fluctuation. This purpose could be fulfilled through model input calibration in which the objective of the calibration focuses on spatial or temporal agreement between simulated and observed values. This study examines the performance of CERES-Rice at the regional scale across China using a cross calibration process based on limited experiment data, agroecological zones (AEZ) and 50 km x 50 km grid scale geographical database. Model performance is evaluated using rice yields from experimental sites at the plot scale, and/or observed yield data at the county scale. Results suggest: the CERES-Rice model was able to simulate the site-specific rice production with good performance in most of China, with a root mean square error (RMSE) = 991 kg ha(-1) and a relative RMSE = 14.9% for yield across China. The cross calibration process, in which AEZ-scale parameter values were derived, gave a relative bigger bias to yield estimation, with a RMSE = 1485 kg ha-1 and a relative RMSE = 22.5%, but achieved a reasonable agreement with observed maturity day and yield at spatial scale. The bias rose further if this cross calibrated model was used to simulate the real farmer rice yields at a regional scale, with a RMSE = 2191 kg ha-1 and relative RMSE = 34% across China. The pattern of yield variation was captured spatially by the model in most of the rice planting areas, but not temporally The sources of uncertainties were analyzed for both plot scale and regional scale simulation. This calibration process could be incorporated into climate change integrated assessment and adaptation assessment, especially for those developing counties with limited observed data. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V All rights reserved.
C1 [Xiong, Wei; Lin, Erda; Li, Yue] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Environm & Sustainable Dev Agr, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China.
   [Xiong, Wei; Lin, Erda; Li, Yue] Minist Agr, Key Lab Agroenvironm & Climate Change, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China.
   [Holman, Ian] Cranfield Univ, Dept Nat Resources, Cranfield MK43 0AL, Beds, England.
   [Conway, Declan] Univ E Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
C3 Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences; Institute of Environment &
   Sustainable Development in Agriculture, CAAS; Ministry of Agriculture &
   Rural Affairs; Cranfield University; University of East Anglia
RP Xiong, W (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst Environm & Sustainable Dev Agr, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China.
EM Xiongw@ami.ac.cn
RI Conway, Declan/HCH-7778-2022; xiong, wei/O-1782-2014; Holman,
   Ian/A-7108-2010
OI Holman, Ian/0000-0002-5263-7746; Conway, Declan/0000-0002-4590-6733
FU NERC [tynd10001] Funding Source: UKRI
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NR 66
TC 79
Z9 110
U1 0
U2 69
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0304-3800
EI 1872-7026
J9 ECOL MODEL
JI Ecol. Model.
PD MAY 24
PY 2008
VL 213
IS 3-4
BP 365
EP 380
DI 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2008.01.005
PG 16
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 297OB
UT WOS:000255624900009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhao, HX
   Gu, BJ
   Zhou, L
   Li, X
   Gu, X
AF Zhao, Haixia
   Gu, Binjie
   Zhou, Ling
   Li, Xin
   Gu, Xiang
TI Evaluating the demand for urban green infrastructure: A residential
   perspective
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Questionnaire survey; Residential demand; Urban green infrastructure;
   City parks; Nanjing
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; HUMAN HEALTH; PARKS; SPACE; URBANIZATION;
   ECOSYSTEM; ENVIRONMENT; MITIGATION; AREAS
AB Climate change and the pandemic have significantly influenced, and in some instances, transformed people's perceptions of the environment, social interaction, and physical and mental health. Urban green infrastructure, such as city parks, provides open spaces that are increasingly favored by urban residents. This study utilized questionnaire surveys and mobile phone data to evaluate the demand for 30 representative city parks in Nanjing, employing the analytic hierarchy process. The results indicate that residents' demand for city parks is shaped by their basic characteristics, mode of travel, and usage patterns, with a primary emphasis on physical exercise and social interaction. The overall demand for city parks decreases from the main urban areas to the suburbs. Urban residents generally anticipate convenient, comfortable and safe green infrastructure. The demand for sharing high-quality city parks sharing is primarily expressed in three aspects: fully equipped facilities, a beautiful landscape environment, and efficient management and maintenance. Therefore, it is crucial to propose strategies to enhance the service level and efficiency of urban green infrastructure in Nanjing to meet residents' demands.
C1 [Zhao, Haixia; Gu, Binjie; Zhou, Ling; Li, Xin] Chinese Acad Sci, Nanjing Inst Geog & Limnol, Key Lab Lake & Watershed Sci Water Secur, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China.
   [Gu, Binjie; Zhou, Ling; Li, Xin] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Nanjing Coll, Nanjing 211135, Peoples R China.
   [Gu, Xiang] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Emergency Management Coll, Nanjing 210044, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Nanjing Institute of Geography & Limnology,
   CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of
   Sciences, CAS; Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology
RP Zhao, HX (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Nanjing Inst Geog & Limnol, Key Lab Lake & Watershed Sci Water Secur, Nanjing 210008, Peoples R China.
EM hxzhao@niglas.ac.cn
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [42371318]
FX This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China [grant numbers 42371318] .
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NR 82
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 19
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD OCT
PY 2024
VL 153
AR 105271
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2024.105271
EA JUL 2024
PG 12
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA A9M1A
UT WOS:001285697200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Hussain, F
   Brown, S
AF Hussain, Faheem
   Brown, Suzana
BE Chigona, W
   Kabanda, S
   Seymour, LF
TI Climate Change and Displacement: Emerging ICT Innovations from the
   World's Largest Refugee Camp
SO IMPLICATIONS OF INFORMATION AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES FOR DEVELOPMENT, PT
   I, ICT4D 2024
SE IFIP Advances in Information and Communication Technology
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 18th International Conference on Implications of Information and Digital
   Technologies for Development (ICT4D)
CY MAY 20-22, 2024
CL Cape Town, SOUTH AFRICA
DE Climate Change; Displacement; ICTs; Refugees; Rohingyas
AB This paper investigates the potential of Information and Communication Technology (ICT) in aiding Rohingya refugees in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, affected by climate change-induced disasters. Focusing on creating tailored solutions, the study highlights challenges faced by refugees and the limited use of ICTs in providing effective support. Collaborating with Young Power in Social Action (YPSA) and their Voice of Palong (VoP) project, the research emphasizes the need for localized early warning systems and communication strategies. VoP's initiatives, including radio programs and audio-visual content, empower refugees and host communities, enhancing resilience and cohesion. The review examines the concept of climate refugees, ICT's role in resilience, and vulnerabilities of Rohingya refugees. It stresses the importance of ICTs in monitoring climate change and underscores challenges faced by refugees in vulnerable areas. Discussing emerging themes like communication challenges, mistrust due to misinformation, and ICTs for localized content, the paper concludes by advocating collaborative efforts to utilize ICTs for climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. It suggests scaling similar initiatives globally to revolutionize disaster response approaches in various humanitarian settings.
C1 [Hussain, Faheem] Arizona State Univ, 411 N Cent Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85004 USA.
   [Brown, Suzana] SUNY Korea, 119-2 Songdo, Incheon 21985, South Korea.
C3 Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Downtown Phoenix
RP Brown, S (corresponding author), SUNY Korea, 119-2 Songdo, Incheon 21985, South Korea.
EM suzana.brown@sunykorea.ac.kr
OI Brown, Suzana/0000-0002-2184-1701
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NR 20
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1868-4238
EI 1868-422X
BN 978-3-031-66984-2; 978-3-031-66982-8; 978-3-031-66981-1
J9 IFIP ADV INF COMM TE
PY 2024
VL 708
BP 275
EP 285
DI 10.1007/978-3-031-66982-8_19
PG 11
WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Social Issues
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Computer Science; Social Issues
GA BX6BH
UT WOS:001307344800019
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Imperiale, AJ
   Vanclay, F
AF Imperiale, Angelo Jonas
   Vanclay, Frank
TI Re-designing Social Impact Assessment to enhance community resilience
   for Disaster Risk Reduction, Climate Action and Sustainable Development
SO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE capacity development; climate change adaptation; community
   participation; disaster risk governance; environmental governance;
   place-based development; urban and regional planning
ID PROJECT-INDUCED DISPLACEMENT; HUMAN-RIGHTS; ENVIRONMENTAL-MANAGEMENT;
   ORGANIZED-CRIME; ELITE CAPTURE; PARTICIPATION; POLICY; VULNERABILITY;
   PRINCIPLES; CORPORATE
AB Enhancing disaster risk reduction (DRR) and community resilience are fundamental for sustainable development. However, cultural and political-institutional barriers hinder governments from progressing towards sustainability. We propose a redesign of social impact assessment (SIA) to make it more applicable to the field of regional and urban planning, and we discuss the role SIA can have in enhancing community resilience to achieve DRR and sustainable development in localities. We argue that, to convert SIA into a tool that can inform regional recovery and development planning, a rethinking of SIA and of the role of SIA practitioners is needed. We therefore expound the SIA Framework for Action and we enhance it to be a community-based process focussed on informing regional policies and plans and decisions about the projects to be included in such plans. Application of the SIA Framework for Action will help governments overcome the barriers to DRR and sustainable development.
C1 [Imperiale, Angelo Jonas; Vanclay, Frank] Univ Groningen, Fac Spatial Sci, Groningen, Netherlands.
   [Imperiale, Angelo Jonas] IHE Delft, Inst Water Educ, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Imperiale, Angelo Jonas] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog Earth & Atmospher Sci, Melbourne, Australia.
C3 University of Groningen; IHE Delft Institute for Water Education;
   University of Melbourne
RP Imperiale, AJ (corresponding author), Univ Groningen, Fac Spatial Sci, Groningen, Netherlands.
EM a.j.imperiale@rug.nl
RI Vanclay, Frank/B-2194-2008; Imperiale, Angelo Jonas/L-7414-2017
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NR 162
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 7
U2 32
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0968-0802
EI 1099-1719
J9 SUSTAIN DEV
JI Sustain. Dev.
PD APR
PY 2024
VL 32
IS 2
SI SI
BP 1571
EP 1587
DI 10.1002/sd.2690
EA JUL 2023
PG 17
WC Development Studies; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Regional
   & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Public
   Administration
GA MP4G9
UT WOS:001035589800001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sorgho, R
   Bhatt, M
   Danquah, I
   Sauerborn, R
AF Sorgho, Raissa
   Bhatt, Mahir
   Danquah, Ina
   Sauerborn, Rainer
TI Institutional barriers to climate change and health adaptation in
   Burkina Faso
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE West Africa; climate change; adaptation; health; policymaker; barriers;
   institutional
ID TEMPERATURE; NUTRITION; MORTALITY
AB West African countries, such as Burkina Faso are particularly vulnerable to an array of health impacts due to climate change. Consequently, Burkina Faso has drafted and implemented adaptation plans and programmes, with varying levels of success. This exploratory qualitative study examines the institutional barriers faced by policymakers in this process, particularly in the health system of concern. We applied in-depth interviews with policymakers, using framework analysis. We identified the barriers to implementing climate change and health programmes and categorized the barriers according to the Framework to diagnose barriers to climate change adaptation. Policymakers identified eight interconnected barriers through the framework: Four barriers in the management phase (insufficient financial resources, frequent turnover, policy-politics disconnect /weak structural support, unsustainable programming), three in the planning phase (heft of bureaucracy/lack of political will, diverging development priorities, insufficient cooperation), one in the larger context of Burkina Faso's environment (national security). The respondents mentioned no barriers in the understanding phase. These barriers are indicative of weak institutional support systems and limited resource allocation to climate and health work in Burkina Faso.
C1 [Sorgho, Raissa; Bhatt, Mahir; Danquah, Ina; Sauerborn, Rainer] Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Inst Global Hlth, Neuenheimer Feld 324, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
C3 Ruprecht Karls University Heidelberg
RP Sorgho, R (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Inst Global Hlth, Neuenheimer Feld 324, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
EM raissa.sorgho@uni-heidelberg.de
OI Sauerborn, Rainer/0000-0002-3201-4058; Sorgho,
   Raissa/0000-0003-2026-2457; Bhatt, Mahir/0000-0002-0534-1643; Danquah,
   Ina/0000-0003-3222-3498
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NR 57
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD AUG 9
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 7
BP 578
EP 589
DI 10.1080/17565529.2022.2125786
EA OCT 2022
PG 12
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA M9ZG2
UT WOS:000876223000001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Black, KP
   Baba, M
   Mathew, J
   Kurian, NP
   Ilic, A
AF Black, Kerry P.
   Baba, Mytheenkhan
   Mathew, Joseph
   Kurian, Njaliplackil P.
   Ilic, Ana
TI Guidelines to Prepare India's Coast for Climate Change
SO JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Coastal protection; climate change; coast of India; coastal management;
   beach orientation
ID ZONE MANAGEMENT; EROSION; IMPLEMENTATION; OPPORTUNITIES; ADAPTATION;
   EVOLUTION; POLICY
AB India's first coastal protection guidelines for climate-change adaptation are described. The guidelines are holistic, recognizing the links between engineering, economic, physical, legal, social, environmental, and governmental intricacies. Robust protection solutions under climate change for millions of coastal residents may occur only when all these facets are improved within the complex regulatory, budgetary, and practical circumstances in India. Fifty-seven specific guidelines are presented in nine categories ranging from administrative to best-practice coastal protection. An "environmental softness ladder"that ranks coastal protection methods was developed as a scientific tool to guide policy development and project implementation. "Minimum floor level"for safe building was defined for each Indian coastal state using climate-change data produced for the study by Indian and international institutes. Beaches are more stable when the net sediment transport fluxes are close to neutral. "Grand schemes,"which make large-scale changes to the coast rather than continuing with piecemeal localised works, are recommended. With diverse dynamics over a long coastline in India, the 4-year study engaged an exceptionally large number of experts, agencies, government bodies, development partners, and other stakeholders.
C1 [Black, Kerry P.; Mathew, Joseph] Sanctuary Beach Pte Ltd, Singapore, Singapore.
   [Baba, Mytheenkhan; Kurian, Njaliplackil P.; Ilic, Ana] FCG ANZDEC Ltd, Auckland 0622, New Zealand.
RP Black, KP (corresponding author), Sanctuary Beach Pte Ltd, Singapore, Singapore.
EM kerrypeterblack@gmail.com
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NR 34
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 7
PU COASTAL EDUCATION & RESEARCH FOUNDATION
PI COCONUT CREEK
PA 5130 NW 54TH STREET, COCONUT CREEK, FL 33073 USA
SN 0749-0208
EI 1551-5036
J9 J COASTAL RES
JI J. Coast. Res.
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 37
IS 6
BP 1117
EP 1129
DI 10.2112/JCOASTRES-D-21-00065.1
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Geography, Physical; Geosciences,
   Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology
GA YS7VG
UT WOS:000750880400004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bertoldo, R
   Guignard, S
   Dias, P
   Schleyer-Lindenmann, A
AF Bertoldo, Raquel
   Guignard, Severin
   Dias, Pierre
   Schleyer-Lindenmann, Alexandra
TI Coastal inconsistencies: Living with and anticipating coastal flood
   risks in southern France
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Coastal floods; Social representations; Climate change adaptation; Risk
   perception; SARF; Place attachment
ID SOCIAL AMPLIFICATION; MEDIA
AB As coastal floods will grow stronger due to climate change, coastal communities' capacity to perceive, understand and adapt to an evolving environment must be assessed. This study explores how inhabitants of two Mediterranean French cities, Frejus and Port-Saint-Louis-du-Rhone (PSLR), understand and prepare for coastal flood risk. A constructivist approach was adopted combining elements of the Theory of Social Representations and the Social Amplification of Risk Framework. Semistructured interviews were conducted with 41 inhabitants of these two localities. Local dwellers of the two cities base their knowledge of coastal flood risk on previous fluvial flood experiences. Affective attachment to the coast is expressed differently between localities - PSLR inhabitants describe an environmental history that is part of their personal history; whereas Fre ' jus inhabitants have elected this place to live. Risk attenuation argumentative strategies are identified: social comparison, risk comparison and fatalism. A shared understanding that 'something must happen' before coastal floods are taken seriously was also identified. This is discussed as an example of how the objectification process of social representations contributes to raising the societal awareness of new risks, or to their social amplification.
C1 [Bertoldo, Raquel] Aix Marseille Univ, LPS, Aix En Provence, France.
   [Guignard, Severin; Dias, Pierre; Schleyer-Lindenmann, Alexandra] Aix Marseille Univ, Univ Cote dAzur, Avignon Univ, CNRS,ESPACE,UMR, F-7300 Avignon, France.
C3 Aix-Marseille Universite; Universite Cote d'Azur; Centre National de la
   Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Avignon Universite; Aix-Marseille
   Universite
RP Bertoldo, R (corresponding author), Aix Marseille Univ, Lab Psychol Sociale, UR 849, 29 Ave Robert Schuman, F-13621 Aix En Provence, France.
EM raquel.bohn-bertoldo@univ-amu.fr
RI Bertoldo, Raquel/F-9319-2012; Schleyer-Lindenmann,
   Alexandra/AAP-4511-2021
OI Bertoldo, Raquel/0000-0003-0172-5540; Schleyer-Lindenmann,
   Alexandra/0000-0002-6173-4628; GUIGNARD, Severin/0000-0002-9350-1677
FU Labex OT-Med [ANR-11-LABX0061]; Excellence Initiative of Aix-Marseille
   University-A*MIDEX; French "Investissements d'Avenir" programme (RISKMED
   project); European Union-FEDER programme
FX This work is a contribution to Labex OT-Med (n. ANR-11-LABX0061) and
   received funding from Excellence Initiative of Aix-Marseille
   University-A*MIDEX, a French "Investissements d'Avenir" programme
   (RISKMED project). Additional funding was provided for the study in
   France by the European Union-FEDER programme (DIGUE 2020 project). We
   would also like to thank Claire Mays for carefully reviewing a first
   version of this manuscript.
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NR 45
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 7
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD OCT
PY 2021
VL 64
AR 102521
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2021.102521
EA AUG 2021
PG 8
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA UY8ZU
UT WOS:000701806200002
OA Green Submitted, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ramalho, Q
   Tourinho, L
   Almeida-Gomes, M
   Vale, MM
   Prevedello, AJ
AF Ramalho, Quezia
   Tourinho, Luara
   Almeida-Gomes, Mauricio
   Vale, M. Mariana
   Prevedello, A. Jayme
TI Reforestation can compensate negative effects of climate change on
   amphibians
SO BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION
LA English
DT Article
DE Anurans; Atlantic Forest; Climatic suitability; Land use; Reforestation;
   Conservation
ID SPECIES DISTRIBUTION; ATLANTIC FOREST; LAND-USE; REPRODUCTIVE MODES;
   DIVERSITY; NICHE; DEFORESTATION; MONKEYS; ANURA; AREA
AB Climate and land-use change are major drivers of biodiversity loss, but their combined effects are still unclear. Reforestation may compensate or reduce climate change impacts on species, but this hypothesis has not been tested yet. Here we quantify the additive and synergistic effects of forest change - in particular, reforestation - and climate changes on ten endemic and forest-dependent anurans of the Atlantic Forest biodiversity hotspot. We estimated climatic and habitat suitability for all species under historical and future (2050) conditions, using niche modeling and forest cover maps from a comprehensive land-use model. We contrasted a pessimistic landuse scenario, with little change in forest cover, with an optimistic scenario, with forest gain through restoration of "legal reserve" areas. Our models show that climate change will have species-specific effects on anurans, increasing climatic suitability for seven species, but decreasing for three. For these three species, we predict that forest gain can compensate the negative impact of climate change, increasing overall environmental suitability. These results reinforce the importance of ensuring reforestation and forest protection as a climate change adaptation strategy for biodiversity.
C1 [Ramalho, Quezia; Prevedello, A. Jayme] Univ Estado Rio De Janeiro, Lab Ecol Paisagens, BR-20550900 Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
   [Ramalho, Quezia] Univ Estado Rio De Janeiro, Programa Pos Grad Ecol Evol PPGEE, BR-20550900 Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
   [Tourinho, Luara] Univ Fed Rio Janeiro UFRJ, Programa Pos Grad Ecol PPGE, Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
   [Almeida-Gomes, Mauricio] Univ Fed Mato Grosso, Inst Biociencias, Campo Grande, BR-79002970 Mato Grosso, Brazil.
   [Vale, M. Mariana] Univ Fed Rio Janeiro UFRJ, Dept Ecol, Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
C3 Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro; Universidade do Estado do Rio
   de Janeiro; Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro; Universidade Federal
   de Mato Grosso; Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
RP Ramalho, Q (corresponding author), Univ Estado Rio De Janeiro, Inst Biol, Dept Ecol, Labo Ecol Paisagens, Rua Sao Francisco Xavier 524, BR-20550900 Rio De Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
EM queziaramalho@gmail.com
RI Ramalho, Quezia/AFG-1625-2022; Almeida-Gomes, Mauricio/L-5885-2015;
   Tourinho, Luara/AAD-3424-2022; M. Vale, Mariana/I-9408-2012
OI Almeida-Gomes, Mauricio/0000-0001-7938-354X; M. Vale,
   Mariana/0000-0003-0734-4925; Ramalho, Quezia/0000-0001-9707-832X;
   Tourinho, Luara/0000-0003-0098-6415
FU Coordenacao de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES)
   [001]; Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
   (FAPERJ); National Council for Scientific and Technological Development
   (CNPq) [304309/2018-4]; FINEP [01.13.0353-00]; CNPq [465610/2014-5];
   FAPEG [201810267000023]
FX Ramalho master's studentship was funded by Coordenacao de
   Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nivel Superior (CAPES, Finance Code 001)
   and Fundacao de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ).
   Mariana Moncassim Vale received support from the National Council for
   Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq) (Grant no.
   304309/2018-4). This paper was developed in the context of the Brazilian
   Research Network on Climate Change, supported by FINEP (Grants no.
   01.13.0353-00) and the National Institute for Science and Technology in
   Ecology, Evolution and Biodiversity Conservation, supported by CNPq
   (Grant no. 465610/2014-5) and FAPEG (Grant no. 201810267000023). We are
   grateful to Maria Lucia Lorini and Carlos Frederico Duarte Rocha for all
   constructive comments. We are grateful for the comments on amphibians
   provided by members of the Vertebrate Ecology Lab at UERJ. We thank
   Marinez Siqueira from Rio de Janeiro Botanical Garden, who provided the
   bioclimatic data for Eta regional model. Quezia Ramalho thanks to Paula
   Diniz immensely for all her help with translation and long discussions
   about this research.
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NR 76
TC 13
Z9 14
U1 3
U2 39
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0006-3207
EI 1873-2917
J9 BIOL CONSERV
JI Biol. Conserv.
PD AUG
PY 2021
VL 260
AR 109187
DI 10.1016/j.biocon.2021.109187
EA MAY 2021
PG 10
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TS3GD
UT WOS:000679541200006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU van Houten, S
   Muñoz, C
   Bree, L
   Bergamín, D
   Sola, C
   Lijavetzky, D
AF van Houten, Silvina
   Munoz, Claudio
   Bree, Laura
   Bergamin, Daniel
   Sola, Cristobal
   Lijavetzky, Diego
TI Natural Genetic Variation for Grapevine Phenology as a Tool for Climate
   Change Adaptation
SO APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE Vitis viniferaL; 'Malbec'; climate change; fruiting cuttings; clonal
   genetic variability; high temperature; phenology
ID VITIS-VINIFERA L.; TEMPERATURE; CUTTINGS; ACCUMULATION; BERRIES
AB Featured Application This article belongs to the Special Issue Climate Change Impact on Viticulture and Potential Adaptation Strategies. Grapevine phenology is being modified by climate change, particularly by the increase of temperatures that affect grape attributes for wine production. Besides the existing oenological and viticultural approaches, the thorough exploration of the current intra-cultivar genetic variability to select late-ripening genotypes emerges as an interesting alternative. In the present work, we have analyzed the natural genetic variation for phenology and agronomic traits among 21 'Malbec' clones and we demonstrated that fruiting cuttings are a useful tool for the analysis of such variation in 'Malbec'. Several clones could be distinguished by agronomic traits like berry number or cluster weight, and mainly by phenology characteristics like the length of the phase between flowering and veraison, which reached more than 16 days between early and late clones. These results support the approach of exploring grapevine clone collections in searching for genotypes with delayed phenology, and thus with the potential to maintain some expected quality characteristics under warm conditions.
C1 [van Houten, Silvina; Munoz, Claudio; Lijavetzky, Diego] CONICET UNCuyo, Inst Biol Agr Mendoza IBAM, Almirante Brown 500,M5528AHB, Mendoza, Argentina.
   [Bree, Laura; Bergamin, Daniel; Sola, Cristobal] Vivero Mercier Argentina, Ruta 40 Km 3273,M5509, Mendoza, Argentina.
RP Lijavetzky, D (corresponding author), CONICET UNCuyo, Inst Biol Agr Mendoza IBAM, Almirante Brown 500,M5528AHB, Mendoza, Argentina.
EM silvivanh@gmail.com; cmunoz@fca.uncu.edu.ar; lbree@viveromercier.com.ar;
   dbergamin@viveromercier.com.ar; cjdsola@yahoo.com.ar;
   dlijavetzky@conicet.gov.ar
RI Lijavetzky, Diego/IZQ-0632-2023
OI Lijavetzky, Diego/0000-0003-4207-3067
FU Agencia Nacional de Promocion de la Investigacion, el Desarrollo
   Tecnologico y la Innovacion [ANR INT 3500-0005, PICT2015-0822]; National
   University of Cuyo (SIIP-UNCUYO)
FX This work was funded by Agencia Nacional de Promocion de la
   Investigacion, el Desarrollo Tecnologico y la Innovacion, grant numbers:
   ANR INT 3500-0005 and PICT2015-0822. Silvina van Houten acknowledges the
   National University of Cuyo (SIIP-UNCUYO) for her postgraduate
   fellowship.
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NR 34
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 11
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2076-3417
J9 APPL SCI-BASEL
JI Appl. Sci.-Basel
PD AUG
PY 2020
VL 10
IS 16
AR 5573
DI 10.3390/app10165573
PG 8
WC Chemistry, Multidisciplinary; Engineering, Multidisciplinary; Materials
   Science, Multidisciplinary; Physics, Applied
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Chemistry; Engineering; Materials Science; Physics
GA NM5AT
UT WOS:000568109900001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bohman, A
   Glaas, E
   Klein, J
   Landauer, M
   Neset, TS
   Linner, BO
   Juhola, S
AF Bohman, Anna
   Glaas, Erik
   Klein, Johannes
   Landauer, Mia
   Neset, Tina-Simone
   Linner, Bjorn-Ola
   Juhola, Sirkku
TI On the call for issue advocates, or what it takes to make adaptation
   research useful
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; DECISION-MAKING; KNOWLEDGE; USABILITY; FRAMEWORK;
   BARRIERS; SUPPORT
AB This essay discusses the concept of usefulness of research for climate change adaptation. Based on prior research and stakeholder interactions with policymakers and practitioners in the Nordic countries, we contend that critical issues related to the usefulness of adaptation research seem less associated with content (i.e. research outputs), but rather centre around the efforts made to design and communicate research, that is, to put research at the service of society and make the case for adaptation on the political agenda. This, we argue, to some extent mirrors the situation and political context in the Nordic countries, where adaptation in many locations still is an issue in its infancy, not firmly established on the political agendas, and where working procedures are not yet institutionally settled. In this context, science is considered and sometimes used as a discursive tool to make the case for adaptation. Based on the calls for research that inspires, raises hope and helps to raise the issue of adaptation on the political agendas, we elaborate the role of honest issue advocates for researchers in the field of adaptation science.
C1 [Bohman, Anna; Glaas, Erik; Neset, Tina-Simone; Linner, Bjorn-Ola; Juhola, Sirkku] Linkoping Univ, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Klein, Johannes] Geol Survey Finland, Espoo, Finland.
   [Landauer, Mia] Univ Lapland, Arctic Ctr, Rovaniemi, Finland.
   [Landauer, Mia] IIASA, Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Juhola, Sirkku] Helsinki Inst Sustainabil Sci HELSUS, Helsinki, Finland.
C3 Linkoping University; Geological Survey of Finland (GTK); University of
   Lapland; International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA);
   University of Helsinki
RP Bohman, A (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Linkoping, Sweden.
EM anna.bohman@liu.se
RI Juhola, Sirkku/IXW-8093-2023; Landauer, Mia/KJM-4945-2024; Linnér,
   Björn-Ola/AAL-2040-2020
OI Neset, Tina-Simone/0000-0003-1151-9943; Juhola,
   Sirkku/0000-0003-0095-2282; Landauer, Mia/0000-0002-7153-8495; Klein,
   Johannes/0000-0003-0721-4063
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NR 32
TC 3
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 5
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JUL
PY 2018
VL 149
IS 2
BP 121
EP 129
DI 10.1007/s10584-018-2237-8
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GO3ZV
UT WOS:000439940200001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kosmowski, F
AF Kosmowski, Frederic
TI Soil water management practices (terraces) helped to mitigate the 2015
   drought in Ethiopia
SO AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Soil water management practices; Climate-smart agriculture; Terraces;
   Contour bunds; Drought; Propensity score matching; Ethiopia
ID NORTHERN ETHIOPIA; PROPENSITY SCORE; CROP YIELD; CONSERVATION; BENEFITS;
   IMPACTS; PACKAGE; TIGRAY; BUNDS
AB While the benefits of soil water management practices relative to soil erosion have been extensively documented, evidence regarding their effect on yields is inconclusive. Following a strong El-Nifio, some regions of Ethiopia experienced major droughts during the 2015/16 agricultural season. Using the propensity scores method on a nationally representative survey in Ethiopia, this study investigates the effect of two widely adopted soil water management practices - terraces and contour bunds - on yields and assesses their potential to mitigate the effects of climate change. It is shown that at the national level, terraced plots have slightly lower yields than non terraced plots. However, data support the hypothesis that terraced plots acted as a buffer against the 2015 Ethiopian drought, while contour bunds did not. This study provides evidence that terraces have the potential to help farmer deal with current climate risks. These results can inform the design of climate change adaptation policies and improve targeting of soil water management practices in Ethiopia.
C1 [Kosmowski, Frederic] CGIAR Standing Panel Impact Assessment, ILRI, POB 5689, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
C3 CGIAR; International Livestock Research Institute (ILRI)
RP Kosmowski, F (corresponding author), CGIAR Standing Panel Impact Assessment, ILRI, POB 5689, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
EM f.kosmowski@cgiar.org
OI Frederic, Kosmowski/0000-0002-5946-1800
FU Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation through the Strengthening Impact
   Assessment in the CGIAR (SIAC) program [OPP1009472]; Bill and Melinda
   Gates Foundation [OPP1009472] Funding Source: Bill and Melinda Gates
   Foundation
FX This study is dedicated to the memory of Prof. Tekalign Mamo, whose
   expertise and political actions lead to the restauration of millions of
   hectares of Ethiopian Highland soils. This work was supported by the
   Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation through the Strengthening Impact
   Assessment in the CGIAR (SIAC) program [grant number OPP1009472]. I
   thank the Central Statistical Agency of Ethiopia and the World Bank
   LSMS-ISA team for the availability of datasets. This manuscript has
   benefited from the comments of Tobias Lunt. Furthermore, I am grateful
   to the anonymous reviewers for their useful comments and suggestions.
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NR 29
TC 39
Z9 39
U1 5
U2 41
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-3774
EI 1873-2283
J9 AGR WATER MANAGE
JI Agric. Water Manage.
PD MAY 31
PY 2018
VL 204
BP 11
EP 16
DI 10.1016/j.agwat.2018.02.025
PG 6
WC Agronomy; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Water Resources
GA GH7NZ
UT WOS:000433642000002
PM 29881139
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Rao, P
   Krishnamurthy, S
   Pradhan, V
AF Rao, Prakash
   Krishnamurthy, Saravan
   Pradhan, Vishal
BE Azeiteiro, UM
   Filho, WL
   Davim, JP
TI Commuters' Carbon Footprints: A Sustainability Case Study from Symbiosis
   International University, India
SO HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS IN A GLOBAL WARMING WORLD: THE TRANSITION
   OF HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS TO A LOW CARBON ECONOMY
SE River Publishers Series in Management Sciences and Engineering
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; URBAN-DEVELOPMENT; MITIGATION; EMISSIONS;
   PUNE
AB This chapter describes the initiative of commuters' carbon footprint (CFP) assessment at Symbiosis International University, Pune, India. A survey enabled comprehension of employees' commuting patterns to various campuses of the University. This baseline study is the foundation for CFP assessments aimed to reduce the University's impacts on global warming. Primary data yielded estimations of university Carbon emissions, commute choices of employees, per campus carbon footprints and eventually an assessment of the university's CFP in commuting aspects alone. These results indicate environmental co-benefits for each campus. The causality of CFP variation at campuses was construed from patterns of employee designations, campus locations, and vehicle types. Grouping of employees were deduced, with practical recommendations for each group and the University as a whole.
   Currently, in India, new Higher Educational Institutions (HEI) operate from multiple campus locations. Decision makers in Indian HEIs who intend to assist the transition of HEIs to a low-carbon economy (LCE) stand to benefit from this research. Beginning with functional changes in commuting choices, taking urgent actions to combat climate change, could inspire pan-India sustainability policies development to reduce HEI CFPs. Widespread implementable LCE options aid integrated sustainability practices.
C1 [Rao, Prakash] Symbiosis Int Univ, Symbiosis Inst Int Business, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
   [Krishnamurthy, Saravan; Pradhan, Vishal] Symbiosis Int Univ, Symbiosis Ctr Informat Technol, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
C3 Symbiosis International University; Symbiosis Institute of International
   Business (SIIB); Symbiosis International University; Symbiosis Centre
   for Information Technology (SCIT)
RP Rao, P (corresponding author), Symbiosis Int Univ, Symbiosis Inst Int Business, Pune, Maharashtra, India.
RI Pradhan, Vishal/AGH-1450-2022; Krishnamurthy, Saravan/U-6564-2017;
   Pradhan, Vishal/U-2186-2017
OI Rao, Prakash/0000-0002-5895-9279; Pradhan, Vishal/0000-0002-3711-8390
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NR 57
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 6
PU RIVER PUBLISHERS
PI AALBORG
PA NIELS JERNES VEJ 10, AALBORG, 9220, DENMARK
BN 978-87-93609-19-8; 978-87-93609-20-4
J9 RIV PUBL SER MANAGE
PY 2017
BP 37
EP 57
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA BM0RR
UT WOS:000459117100004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Andersson-Sköld, Y
   Suer, P
   Bergman, R
   Helgesson, H
AF Andersson-Skold, Yvonne
   Suer, Pascal
   Bergman, Ramona
   Helgesson, Helena
TI Sustainable decisions on the agenda - a decision support tool and its
   application on climate-change adaptation
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE decision support; environmental; social and economic impact assessment
   sustainability; climate change and adaptation; land-use strategies
ID VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENTS; APPRAISAL; FRAMEWORK; QUALITY; SCIENCE;
   CITIES; POLICY
AB A decision support tool aiming to facilitate discussion and transparency in land-use planning processes has been developed. It includes process steps initiating with an analysis of the current situation, identification of relevant actions and sustainability analysis steps. The sustainability was subdivided into human health and environment, resources, and social and economic impacts. The main difference between this risk analysis tool and others is the allowance of comparisons of present risks and consequences of measures early in the process. It also includes assessments from short-and long-term perspectives, such as taking into account climate change. It combines classic risk analysis with life-cycle assessment procedure. It has been developed and tested in co-operation with municipalities. The tests show that the tool is applicable and can be relevant in the planning process. It offers an iterative discussion framework that is systematic, condensed and yet a simplistic way of describing consequences. The criticism is that it is regarded as time demanding, but this can be managed by preparatory work.
C1 [Andersson-Skold, Yvonne] Univ Gothenburg, Dept Earth Sci, COWI AB, Skargardsgatan 1, SE-41458 Gothenburg, Sweden.
   [Andersson-Skold, Yvonne; Suer, Pascal; Bergman, Ramona; Helgesson, Helena] Swedish Geotech Inst, Linkoping, Sweden.
C3 University of Gothenburg; COWI A/S
RP Andersson-Sköld, Y (corresponding author), Univ Gothenburg, Dept Earth Sci, COWI AB, Skargardsgatan 1, SE-41458 Gothenburg, Sweden.; Andersson-Sköld, Y (corresponding author), Swedish Geotech Inst, Linkoping, Sweden.
EM yvan@cowi.se
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NR 62
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 14
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PY 2016
VL 21
IS 1
BP 85
EP 104
DI 10.1080/13549839.2014.922531
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA DP0GK
UT WOS:000378167100006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Roggema, R
AF Roggema, Rob
BA Roggema, R
BF Roggema, R
TI Introduction, Methodology, Limitations
SO SWARM PLANNING: THE DEVELOPMENT OF A PLANNING METHODOLOGY TO DEAL WITH
   CLIMATE ADAPTATION
SE Springer Theses-Recognizing Outstanding PhD Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID CLIMATE ADAPTATION
C1 [Roggema, Rob] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Architecture, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Roggema, Rob] Univ Wageningen & Res Ctr, NL-6700 HB Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Delft University of Technology; Wageningen University & Research
RP Roggema, R (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol, Fac Architecture, Delft, Netherlands.
RI Roggema, Robert/AFM-3455-2022
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NR 87
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 2190-5053
EI 2190-5061
BN 978-94-007-7152-9; 978-94-007-7151-2
J9 SPRINGER THESES-RECO
PY 2014
BP 1
EP 30
DI 10.1007/978-94-007-7152-9_1
D2 10.1007/978-94-007-7152-9
PG 30
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA BA0JZ
UT WOS:000331570400003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jordan, R
   Prober, SM
   Hoffmann, AA
   Dillon, SK
AF Jordan, Rebecca
   Prober, Suzanne M.
   Hoffmann, Ary A.
   Dillon, Shannon K.
TI Combined Analyses of Phenotype, Genotype and Climate Implicate Local
   Adaptation as a Driver of Diversity in<i>Eucalyptus microcarpa</i>(Grey
   Box)
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate; quantitative trait; restoration; SNP-trait association; tree
ID FOREST TREES; POPULATION-GENETICS; COMPLEX TRAITS; GENOME; ASSOCIATION;
   RESPONSES; MARKERS; CONSEQUENCES; RELATEDNESS; WIDESPREAD
AB Trees are a keystone species in many ecosystems and a critical component of ecological restoration. Understanding their capacity to respond to climate change is essential for conserving biodiversity and determining appropriate restoration seed sources. Patterns of local adaptation to climate between populations within a species can inform such conservation decisions and are often investigated from either a quantitative trait or molecular genetic basis. Here, we present findings from a combined analysis of phenotype (quantitative genetic analysis), genotype (single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) trait associations), and climate associations. We draw on the strength of this combined approach to investigate pre-existing climate adaptation and its genetic basis inEucalyptus microcarpa(Grey box), an important tree for ecological restoration in south-eastern Australia. Phenotypic data from a 26-year-old provenance trial demonstrated significant genetic variation in growth and leaf traits at both the family and provenance levels. Growth traits were only associated with temperature, whilst leaf traits were associated with temperature, precipitation and aridity. Genotyping of 40 putatively adaptive SNPs from previous genome-wide analyses identified 9 SNPs associated with these traits. Drawing on previous SNP-climate association results, several associations were identified between all three comparisons of phenotype, genotype and climate. By combining phenotypic with genomic analyses, these results corroborate genomic findings and enhance understanding of climate adaptation inE. microcarpa. We discuss the implication of these results for conservation management and restoration under climate change.
C1 [Jordan, Rebecca; Hoffmann, Ary A.] Univ Melbourne, Sch BioSci, Bio21 Inst, 30 Flemington Rd, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia.
   [Jordan, Rebecca] CSIRO, Land & Water, 15 Coll Rd, Sandy Bay, Tas 7005, Australia.
   [Prober, Suzanne M.] CSIRO, Land & Water, 147 Underwood Ave, Floreat, WA 6014, Australia.
   [Dillon, Shannon K.] CSIRO, Agr & Food, Bldg 801,Clunies Ross St, Black Mt, ACT 2601, Australia.
C3 University of Melbourne; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO); Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO); Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Jordan, R (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Sch BioSci, Bio21 Inst, 30 Flemington Rd, Parkville, Vic 3010, Australia.; Jordan, R (corresponding author), CSIRO, Land & Water, 15 Coll Rd, Sandy Bay, Tas 7005, Australia.
EM rebecca.jordan@csiro.au; suzanne.prober@csiro.au; ary@unimelb.edu.au;
   shannon.dillon@csiro.au
RI Prober, Suzanne/G-6465-2010; Hoffmann, Ary/C-2961-2011
OI Hoffmann, Ary/0000-0001-9497-7645
FU CSIRO Julius Award; Australian Department of Environment and Energy;
   Science and Industry Endowment Fund; Australian Postgraduate Award;
   Eucalypt Australia; Australian Flora Foundation; Holsworth Wildlife
   Research Endowment
FX This study was funded by a CSIRO Julius Award (SMP), the Australian
   Department of Environment and Energy (SMP), Science and Industry
   Endowment Fund (AAH), Australian Postgraduate Award (RJ), Eucalypt
   Australia (RJ, AAH, SMP, SKD), Australian Flora Foundation (RJ, AAH,
   SMP, SKD), and Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment (RJ).
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NR 89
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 2
U2 13
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD MAY
PY 2020
VL 11
IS 5
AR 495
DI 10.3390/f11050495
PG 23
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA MB6UE
UT WOS:000542736000017
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wang, C
   Qi, ZM
   Zhao, JC
   Gao, ZZ
   Zhao, J
   Chen, F
   Chu, QQ
AF Wang, Chong
   Qi, Zhiming
   Zhao, Jiongchao
   Gao, Zhenzhen
   Zhao, Jie
   Chen, Fu
   Chu, Qingquan
TI Sustainable water and nitrogen optimization to adapt to different
   temperature variations and rainfall patterns for a trade-off between
   winter wheat yield and N<sub>2</sub>O emissions br
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Irrigation; Nitrogen fertilizer; Elevated temperature; Precipitation
   type; Nitrous oxide; Yield
ID GREENHOUSE-GAS EMISSIONS; CLIMATE-CHANGE IMPACTS; MAIZE CROPPING SYSTEM;
   OXIDE EMISSIONS; MANAGEMENT-PRACTICES; USE EFFICIENCY; BIOGEOCHEMICAL
   MODEL; AGRICULTURAL REGION; LIMITED-IRRIGATION; FIELD MANAGEMENT
AB Optimizing irrigation and nitrogen (N) fertilizer applications is essential to ensure crop yields and lower environmental risks under climate change. The DeNitrification-DeComposition (DNDC) model was employed to investigate the impacts of irrigation regime (RF, rainfed; MI, minimum irrigation; CI, critical irrigation; FI, full irrigation) and N fertilizer rate(N60, N90, N120, N150, N180, N210, N240, N270, and N300 kg ha-1) on yield and nitrous oxide (N2O) emissions from winter wheat growing season under different temperature rise levels (+0, +0.5, +1.0, +1.5, and +2.0 degrees C scenar-ios) and precipitation year types (wet, normal, and dry seasons) in the North China Plain. Model evaluations demon-strated that simulated soil temperature, soil moisture, daily N2Oflux, yield, and cumulative N2O emissions weregenerally in close agreement with measurements fromfield experiment over three growing seasons. By adopting simu-lation scenarios analysis, the model was then used to explore the effects of irrigation and N fertilizer inputs to balanceyield and N2O emissions from winter wheat growing season. Based on reduced water and fertilizer inputs and N2Oemissions with little yield penalty, recommended management practices included application of MI-N150 in wet season,CI-N120 in both normal and dry seasons, and CI-N150 for +0 to +2.0 degrees C scenarios. Recommended practices in differentprecipitation year types reduced irrigation amount by 75-150 mm, N rate by 75-105 kg N ha-1, yield by 0.16-0.86 tha-1, cumulative N2O emissions by 0.13-0.64 kg ha-1, and yield-scaled N2O emissions by 15.5-85.0 mg kg-1compared with current practices. The corresponding metrics for different elevated temperature levels decreased by75 mm, 75 kg N ha-1,0.09-0.50 t ha-1,0.12-0.52 kg ha-1,and13.7-72.3 mg kg-1, respectively. The proposed man-agement practices can help to maintain high agronomic productivity and alleviate environmental pollution from agricultural ecosystems, thereby providing an important basis for mitigation strategies to adapt to climate change
C1 [Wang, Chong; Zhao, Jiongchao; Gao, Zhenzhen; Zhao, Jie; Chen, Fu; Chu, Qingquan] China Agr Univ, Coll Agron & Biotechnol, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Chong; Zhao, Jiongchao; Gao, Zhenzhen; Chen, Fu; Chu, Qingquan] Minist Agr & Rural Affairs, Key Lab Farming Syst, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
   [Qi, Zhiming] McGill Univ, Dept Bioresource Engn, 21111 Lakeshore Rd, Ste Anne De Bellevue, PQ H9X 3V9, Canada.
C3 China Agricultural University; Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Affairs;
   McGill University
RP Chu, QQ (corresponding author), China Agr Univ, Coll Agron & Biotechnol, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
EM cauchu@cau.edu.cn
RI Zhao(赵), Jie(杰)/GRO-0945-2022; Gao, zhenzhen/JFS-4930-2023
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [31871581]; China
   Scholarship Council (CSC)
FX This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation
   of China (31871581), and the China Scholarship Council (CSC).
   Addition-ally, we acknowledge the cooperation with Mr. Zhaopeng Song
   from Beijing Dongfang Runze Ecological Technology Co., Ltd., Beijing,
   China about the support for the Crop&Soil Monitor. Our deepest gratitude
   goes to the editor and three anonymous reviewers for their careful work
   and thoughtful comments that have helped improve this manuscript
   substantially
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NR 124
TC 12
Z9 14
U1 18
U2 152
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD JAN 1
PY 2023
VL 854
AR 158822
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158822
EA SEP 2022
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 4Y0DO
UT WOS:000861205300012
PM 36116657
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Buenafe, KCV
   Dunn, DC
   Everett, JD
   Brito-Morales, I
   Schoeman, DS
   Hanson, JO
   Dabalà, A
   Neubert, S
   Cannicci, S
   Kaschner, K
   Richardson, AJ
AF Buenafe, Kristine Camille V.
   Dunn, Daniel C.
   Everett, Jason D.
   Brito-Morales, Isaac
   Schoeman, David S.
   Hanson, Jeffrey O.
   Dabala, Alvise
   Neubert, Sandra
   Cannicci, Stefano
   Kaschner, Kristin
   Richardson, Anthony J.
TI A metric-based framework for climate-smart conservation planning
SO ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate resilience; environmental decision making; Marxan; MPAs;
   prioritizr; spatial prioritization; systematic conservation planning
ID MARINE PROTECTED AREAS; OCEAN ACIDIFICATION; CHANGE THREATENS; RANGE
   SHIFTS; CORAL-REEFS; RESPONSES; IMPACTS; TEMPERATURE; MANAGEMENT;
   DIVERSITY
AB Climate change is already having profound effects on biodiversity, but climate change adaptation has yet to be fully incorporated into area-based management tools used to conserve biodiversity, such as protected areas. One main obstacle is the lack of consensus regarding how impacts of climate change can be included in spatial conservation plans. We propose a climate-smart framework that prioritizes the protection of climate refugia-areas of low climate exposure and high biodiversity retention-using climate metrics. We explore four aspects of climate-smart conservation planning: (1) climate model ensembles; (2) multiple emission scenarios; (3) climate metrics; and (4) approaches to identifying climate refugia. We illustrate this framework in the Western Pacific Ocean, but it is equally applicable to terrestrial systems. We found that all aspects of climate-smart conservation planning considered affected the configuration of spatial plans. The choice of climate metrics and approaches to identifying refugia have large effects in the resulting climate-smart spatial plans, whereas the choice of climate models and emission scenarios have smaller effects. As the configuration of spatial plans depended on climate metrics used, a spatial plan based on a single measure of climate change (e.g., warming) will not necessarily be robust against other measures of climate change (e.g., ocean acidification). We therefore recommend using climate metrics most relevant for the biodiversity and region considered based on a single or multiple climate drivers. To include the uncertainty associated with different climate futures, we recommend using multiple climate models (i.e., an ensemble) and emission scenarios. Finally, we show that the approaches we used to identify climate refugia feature trade-offs between: (1) the degree to which they are climate-smart, and (2) their efficiency in meeting conservation targets. Hence, the choice of approach will depend on the relative value that stakeholders place on climate adaptation. By using this framework, protected areas can be designed with improved longevity and thus safeguard biodiversity against current and future climate change. We hope that the proposed climate-smart framework helps transition conservation planning toward climate-smart approaches.
C1 [Buenafe, Kristine Camille V.; Dunn, Daniel C.; Dabala, Alvise] Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Buenafe, Kristine Camille V.; Everett, Jason D.; Dabala, Alvise; Neubert, Sandra; Richardson, Anthony J.] Univ Queensland, Sch Math & Phys, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Buenafe, Kristine Camille V.; Cannicci, Stefano] Univ Florence, Dept Biol, Florence, Italy.
   [Buenafe, Kristine Camille V.; Cannicci, Stefano] Univ Hong Kong, Swire Inst Marine Sci & Area Ecol & Biodivers, Sch Biol Sci, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Dunn, Daniel C.] Univ Queensland, Ctr Biodivers & Conservat Sci CBCS, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Everett, Jason D.; Richardson, Anthony J.] Queensland Biosci Precinct QBP, Commonwealth Sci & Ind Res Org CSIRO Environm, St Lucia, Qld, Australia.
   [Everett, Jason D.] Univ New South Wales, Ctr Marine Sci & Innovat CMSI, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
   [Brito-Morales, Isaac] Betty & Gordon Moore Ctr Sci, Conservat Int, Arlington, VA USA.
   [Brito-Morales, Isaac] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Marine Sci Inst, Santa Barbara, CA USA.
   [Schoeman, David S.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sch Sci Technol & Engn, Ocean Futures Res Cluster, Maroochydore, Qld, Australia.
   [Schoeman, David S.] Nelson Mandela Univ, Ctr African Conservat Ecol, Dept Zool, Gqeberha, South Africa.
   [Hanson, Jeffrey O.] Carleton Univ, Dept Biol, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
   [Dabala, Alvise] Univ Libre Bruxelles, Fac Sci, Dept Organism Biol, Syst Ecol & Resource Management, Brussels, Belgium.
   [Dabala, Alvise] Vrije Univ Brussel, Biol Dept, Lab Plant Biol & Nat Management, Ecol & Biodivers, Brussels, Belgium.
   [Neubert, Sandra] Univ Leipzig, Inst Comp Sci, Leipzig, Germany.
   [Kaschner, Kristin] Albert Ludwigs Univ Freiburg, Dept Biometry & Environm Syst Anal, Freiburg, Germany.
C3 University of Queensland; University of Queensland; University of
   Florence; University of Hong Kong; University of Queensland;
   Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO);
   University of New South Wales Sydney; Conservation International;
   University of California System; University of California Santa Barbara;
   University of the Sunshine Coast; Nelson Mandela University; Carleton
   University; Universite Libre de Bruxelles; Vrije Universiteit Brussel;
   Leipzig University; University of Freiburg
RP Buenafe, KCV (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.; Buenafe, KCV (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Math & Phys, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.; Buenafe, KCV (corresponding author), Univ Florence, Dept Biol, Florence, Italy.; Buenafe, KCV (corresponding author), Univ Hong Kong, Swire Inst Marine Sci & Area Ecol & Biodivers, Sch Biol Sci, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
EM k.buenafe@uqconnect.edu.au
RI Hanson, Jeffrey/O-4536-2015; Everett, Jason/C-4557-2008; Buenafe,
   Kristine Camille/IYJ-5797-2023; Cannicci, Stefano/L-7136-2015; Kaschner,
   Kristin/GQQ-6475-2022; Neubert, Sandra/LJK-8868-2024; Brito-Morales,
   Isaac/L-2071-2019; Brito Morales, Isaac/C-3104-2019
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FU European Commission; National Science Foundation (NSF) [2029710]; Nature
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FX Erasmus Joint Master Degree Program by the European Commission; National
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NR 122
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 7
U2 39
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1051-0761
EI 1939-5582
J9 ECOL APPL
JI Ecol. Appl.
PD JUN
PY 2023
VL 33
IS 4
AR e2852
DI 10.1002/eap.2852
EA APR 2023
PG 29
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA H8CQ6
UT WOS:000973637600001
PM 36946332
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vaughn, SE
AF Vaughn, Sarah E.
TI Imagining the Ordinary in Participatory Climate Adaptation
SO WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
AB This article examines the ways Red Cross training in vulnerability capacity assessment (VCA) structures people's understandings of the ordinary. This examination is situated within the context of Georgetown, Guyana, after disastrous flooding in 2005 led the Red Cross to deploy VCAs as a method for participatory climate adaptation. The article focuses on the circulation of narratives about the ordinary, which are used by VCA trainees to cultivate ethical responses to flood hazards and the use of water management equipment. It is argued that participatory climate adaptation can be understood as not simply a mode of governance, but rather as a model for reimagining the ordinary. While other scholarship on participatory climate adaptation addresses how daily life is informed by the political and ideological dynamics of such projects, this article focuses on the ordinary from the view of "mobile'' climate adaptation technologies. From this perspective, VCA trainees take action but often times rely on sheer intuition to create knowledge practices in an attempt to navigate crisis in the everyday. In turn, they learn that while the VCA may nourish alternative forms of expertise, it is no easy or fool-proof solution for climate adaptation.
C1 [Vaughn, Sarah E.] Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Anthropol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Berkeley
RP Vaughn, SE (corresponding author), Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Anthropol, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA.
EM sev83@berkeley.edu
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NR 38
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 2
PU AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
PI BOSTON
PA 45 BEACON ST, BOSTON, MA 02108-3693, UNITED STATES
SN 1948-8327
EI 1948-8335
J9 WEATHER CLIM SOC
JI Weather Clim. Soc.
PD JUL
PY 2017
VL 9
IS 3
BP 533
EP 543
DI 10.1175/WCAS-D-16-0118.1
PG 11
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA FB1SY
UT WOS:000405925000014
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Xu, WQ
   Ren, CQ
   Zhang, XY
   Comes, HP
   Liu, XH
   Li, YG
   Kettle, CJ
   Jalonen, R
   Gaisberger, H
   Ma, YZ
   Qiu, YX
AF Xu, Wu-Qin
   Ren, Chao-Qian
   Zhang, Xin-Yi
   Comes, Hans-Peter
   Liu, Xin-Hong
   Li, Yin-Gang
   Kettle, Christopher J.
   Jalonen, Riina
   Gaisberger, Hannes
   Ma, Ya-Zhen
   Qiu, Ying-Xiong
TI Genome sequences and population genomics reveal climatic adaptation and
   genomic divergence between two closely related sweetgum species
SO PLANT JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE sweetgum; speciation; population genomics; demographic modeling;
   climatic adaptation; divergent selection
ID LIQUIDAMBAR ALTINGIACEAE; GENE; EVOLUTION; DIFFERENTIATION;
   RECOMBINATION; SPECIATION; PREDICTION; INFERENCE; SELECTION; ISLANDS
AB Understanding the genetic basis of population divergence and adaptation is an important goal in population genetics and evolutionary biology. However, the relative roles of demographic history, gene flow, and/or selective regime in driving genomic divergence, climatic adaptation, and speciation in non-model tree species are not yet fully understood. To address this issue, we generated whole-genome resequencing data of Liquidambar formosana and L. acalycina, which are broadly sympatric but altitudinally segregated in the Tertiary relict forests of subtropical China. We integrated genomic and environmental data to investigate the demographic history, genomic divergence, and climatic adaptation of these two sister species. We inferred a scenario of allopatric species divergence during the late Miocene, followed by secondary contact during the Holocene. We identified multiple genomic islands of elevated divergence that mainly evolved through divergence hitchhiking and recombination rate variation, likely fostered by long-term refugial isolation and recent differential introgression in low-recombination genomic regions. We also found some candidate genes with divergent selection signatures potentially involved in climatic adaptation and reproductive isolation. Our results contribute to a better understanding of how late Tertiary/Quaternary climatic change influenced speciation, genomic divergence, climatic adaptation, and introgressive hybridization in East Asia's Tertiary relict flora. In addition, they should facilitate future evolutionary, conservation genomics, and molecular breeding studies in Liquidambar, a genus of important medicinal and ornamental values.
   We assembled a chromosome-scale genome of Liquidambar formosana and resequenced 160 individuals of L. formosana and its high-altitude sister species L. acalycina. Benefiting from advanced analytical methods and robust evidence, we found that multiple "genomic islands" mainly evolved as a result of divergence hitchhiking and recombination rate variation, as likely fostered by long-term refugial isolation and recent differential introgression in low-recombination genomic regions; and identified some candidate genes associated with climatic adaptation and reproductive isolation.
C1 [Xu, Wu-Qin; Ren, Chao-Qian; Zhang, Xin-Yi] Zhejiang Univ, Coll Life Sci, Systemat & Evolutionary Bot & Biodivers Grp, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Xu, Wu-Qin] Zhejiang Lab, Hangzhou, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Ren, Chao-Qian; Zhang, Xin-Yi; Ma, Ya-Zhen; Qiu, Ying-Xiong] Chinese Acad Sci, CAS Key Lab Plant Germplasm Enhancement & Specialt, Wuhan Bot Garden, Wuhan 430074, Hubei, Peoples R China.
   [Comes, Hans-Peter] Salzburg Univ, Dept Environm & Biodivers, Salzburg, Austria.
   [Liu, Xin-Hong; Li, Yin-Gang] Zhejiang Acad Forestry, Hangzhou 310023, Peoples R China.
   [Kettle, Christopher J.; Gaisberger, Hannes] Biovers Int, Rome, Italy.
   [Jalonen, Riina] Reg Off Asia, Biovers Int, George Town, Malaysia.
C3 Zhejiang University; Zhejiang Laboratory; Chinese Academy of Sciences;
   Wuhan Botanical Garden, CAS; Salzburg University; Alliance; Bioversity
   International; Alliance; Bioversity International
RP Ma, YZ; Qiu, YX (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, CAS Key Lab Plant Germplasm Enhancement & Specialt, Wuhan Bot Garden, Wuhan 430074, Hubei, Peoples R China.
EM mayazhen@wbgcas.cn; qiuyingxiong@wbgcas.cn
RI qiu, yingxiong/A-4623-2018; Ma, Yazhen/KLC-1018-2024; Gaisberger, Hannes
   Thomas/EXT-3640-2022
OI Gaisberger, Hannes Thomas/0000-0002-6023-1236; Kettle,
   Chris/0000-0002-9476-0136; Jalonen, Riina/0000-0003-1669-9138; Zhang,
   Xinyi/0000-0003-2955-0658; Comes, Hans Peter/0000-0002-2659-8069; Xu,
   Wuqin/0000-0001-5286-7739
FU Key Scientific and Technological Grant of Zhejiang for Breeding New
   Agricultural Varieties; National Natural Science Foundation of China
   [32161143003]; State Key Basic Research and Development Plan of China
   [2022YFF1301703, 2017YFA0605100];  [2021C02070-7]
FX We thank Dr. Rui-sen Lu (Nanjing Institute of Botany), Mr. Xin-peng
   Zhou, and Dr. Jun-ke Li (Zhejiang University) for help with sample
   collection. We also gratefully acknowledge the valuable comments by two
   anonymous reviewers on a previous version of this manuscript. This
   research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (grant no. 32161143003), the State Key Basic Research and
   Development Plan of China (grant nos. 2022YFF1301703, 2017YFA0605100),
   and a Key Scientific and Technological Grant of Zhejiang for Breeding
   New Agricultural Varieties (grant no. 2021C02070-7).
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NR 105
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PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
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J9 PLANT J
JI Plant J.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 118
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DI 10.1111/tpj.16675
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WC Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
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GA ST6G5
UT WOS:001160151200001
PM 38343032
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Walid, M
AF Walid, Mohamed
BE Filho, WL
TI Towards a Mega-Pacific Islands Education Curriculum for Climate
   Adaptation Blending Traditional Knowledge in Modern Curriculum
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION IN PACIFIC COUNTRIES: FOSTERING RESILIENCE AND
   IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF LIFE
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Symposium on Climate Change Adaptation in the Pacific Region
CY JUL 26-28, 2016
CL Lautoka, FIJI
ID INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE
C1 [Walid, Mohamed] London Sch Econ, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.
C3 University of London; London School Economics & Political Science
RP Walid, M (corresponding author), London Sch Econ, Houghton St, London WC2A 2AE, England.
EM M.Walid-Lotfy@lse.ac.uk
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NR 54
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 3
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-50094-2; 978-3-319-50093-5
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2017
BP 271
EP 285
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-50094-2_16
PG 15
WC Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BJ0KP
UT WOS:000416896300016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Quitzau, MB
   Hoffmann, B
AF Quitzau, Maj-Britt
   Hoffmann, Birgitte
TI Actor-landscapes as visual canvas for identifying, representing, and
   aligning stakeholders
SO FRONTIERS IN BUILT ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE mapping; climate adaptation; stakeholder; engagement; added value;
   municipality
ID BOUNDARY OBJECTS; CONTROVERSIES; DESIGN
AB Tools applied by water professionals in climate adaptation projects tend to have a technical focus and a superficial stakeholder approach. Development of integrative and synergetic solutions require more delicate and transformative forms of stakeholder engagement. Through an action research process, this article explores how a visual canvas for stakeholder engagement can support water professionals in identifying, representing, and aligning stakeholders in development of integrative and synergetic climate adaptation solutions. The visual canvas is developed in the form of 'Actor-Landscapes', and presents a practical tool for engaging stakeholders inspired by Actor-Network Theory. Actor-Landscapes proved to especially support water professionals in four key challenges in their transformative approach to stakeholder engagement: 1) to recognize stakeholders more broadly and deeply, 2) to organize and present data about key stakeholders and the landscape in which these are anchored, 3) to prioritize which stakeholders to enhance based on alignment considerations, and 4) to legitimize mapped stakeholder perspectives through direct dialogue and engagement. The article concludes that Actor-Landscapes have interesting boundary object abilities supporting water professionals in inviting for and empowering integrative and synergetic transformations of knowledge between stakeholders in climate adaptation projects.
C1 [Quitzau, Maj-Britt; Hoffmann, Birgitte] Aalborg Univ, Dept Sustainabil & Planning, Copenhagen, Denmark.
C3 Aalborg University
RP Quitzau, MB (corresponding author), Aalborg Univ, Dept Sustainabil & Planning, Copenhagen, Denmark.
EM quitzau@plan.aau.dk
RI Quitzau, Maj-Britt/AAI-4411-2021
OI Quitzau, Maj-Britt/0000-0002-9907-8224
FU The work related to this article has been funded by the EU Life Coast to
   Coast Climate Challenge (C2CCC) with project number LIFE15IPC/DK/000006.
   The project has been led by Central Denmark Region and involved a large
   number of Danish municipalities, water [LIFE15IPC/DK/000006]; EU Life
   Coast to Coast Climate Challenge; Danish municipalities, water utilities
   and universities
FX The authors would like to acknowledge all the insights gained through
   meetings, workshops, and study trips during the EU Life C2CCC project. A
   special thank you to the municipalities of Hedensted, Norddjurs,
   Syddjurs and Silkeborg, as well as the Central Region Denmark, WSP, and
   the Limfjord secretariat for their engagement into developing and
   testing tools for actor and landscape mapping. The authors would also
   like to appreciate inputs from colleagues Miriam Jensen and Thomas
   Binder, as well as present and former colleagues from the PLUS research
   group that have contributed to this work.r The work related to this
   article has been funded by the EU Life Coast to Coast Climate Challenge
   (C2CCC) with project number LIFE15IPC/DK/000006. The project has been
   led by Central Denmark Region and involved a large number of Danish
   municipalities, water utilities and universities.
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JI Front. Built Environ.
PD SEP 18
PY 2023
VL 9
AR 1105544
DI 10.3389/fbuil.2023.1105544
PG 20
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA S9MZ4
UT WOS:001074346800001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Han, H
   Shen, C
   Li, KQ
   Ho, ATK
AF Han, Hao
   Shen, Chen
   Li, Kaiqin
   Ho, Alfred Tat-Kei
TI Topic evolution in urban studies: Tracking back and moving forward
SO JOURNAL OF URBAN MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban studies; Cities; Bibliometric; Sustainability; Literature review
ID LAND-USE; GREEN SPACES; POLICY; URBANIZATION; BIODIVERSITY; CITIES;
   CHINA; GOVERNANCE; LANDSCAPE; IMPACT
AB This study is a bibliometric analysis of urban studies publications from 2001 to 2021 that unravels the evolution and growing complexity of the field. Although developed regions still dominate and lead this area of inquiry, urban studies led by Asian scholars have increased dramatically over the last decade. There is also topic diffusion from developed regions to less-developed regions despite some unique emphases within each region caused by their local socio-economic-ecological contexts. Climate change adaptation and sustainable development, inequality, and urban governance are receiving growing attention globally. The findings suggest the rising importance of crosscontinent knowledge transfer and multi-disciplinary collaboration, particularly among urban studies, sustainability policies and management, public administration, and development studies. Also, urban researchers need to pay more attention to issues faced by many growing cities in developing economies in Asia and Africa as more of the world's population will reside in those urban settings in the coming decades.
C1 [Han, Hao; Shen, Chen; Li, Kaiqin; Ho, Alfred Tat-Kei] City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Publ & Int Affairs, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
C3 City University of Hong Kong
RP Shen, C; Li, KQ (corresponding author), City Univ Hong Kong, Dept Publ & Int Affairs, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
EM haohan7-c@my.cityu.edu.hk; cheshen7-c@my.cityu.edu.hk;
   kaiqinli2-c@my.cityu.edu.hk; ho.tkalfred@cityu.edu.hk
RI Chen, Shen/HSF-4321-2023
OI Hao, Han/0000-0002-8199-2616; SHEN, Chen/0000-0002-4408-6980; LI,
   Kaiqin/0000-0002-7010-7693
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NR 117
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 4
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2226-5856
EI 2589-0360
J9 J URBAN MANAG
JI J. Urban Manag.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 12
IS 4
BP 398
EP 412
DI 10.1016/j.jum.2023.09.003
EA NOV 2023
PG 15
WC Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA Z6EH1
UT WOS:001112978900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Azeem, A
   Naseem, MA
   Hassan, NU
   Butt, I
   Aslam, MT
   Ali, S
   Jadoon, AK
AF Azeem, Aamir
   Naseem, Muhammad Akram
   Hassan, Naveed Ul
   Butt, Ijaz
   Aslam, Muhammad Toseef
   Ali, Shahid
   Jadoon, Atif Khan
TI A novel lens of stock market capitalization and environmental
   degradation
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Environmental degradation; Stock market capitalization Inverted U;
   Threshold; Efficiency
ID FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT; ENERGY-CONSUMPTION; GROWTH; EMISSIONS
AB This research article examines the impact of stock market capitalization on carbon emissions using forty high carbon-emitting countries from 1996 to 2018. This study adopts the Driscoll- Kraay method that simultaneously tackles heteroscedasticity, autocorrelation, and contemporaneous correlation issues. We find an inverted U relationship between stock market capitalization ( SMC) and environmental degradation. We propose an extended environmental Kuznets curve based on SMC while energy intensity, industrialization, and urbanization increase emissions in sample countries. The quadratic method, SLM test, and derivative graphing detect the consensus of the inverted U relationship. The weak-negative SMC2 coefficient reveals that the dangerous impact of capitalization declines gradually and finally curbs the environmental degradation challenges. The relationship is strong in highly polluted countries with overvalued stock markets. The study catches no policy synergies between the growing stock market and increased carbon emissions. Stock market capitalization should be integrated into climate change adaptation strategies at national and regional levels, primarily to address the dark effect of environmental degradation.
C1 [Azeem, Aamir; Naseem, Muhammad Akram] Univ Lahore, Lahore Business Sch, Lahore 55150, Pakistan.
   [Azeem, Aamir; Hassan, Naveed Ul; Butt, Ijaz; Aslam, Muhammad Toseef] Virtual Univ Pakistan, Dept Management Sci, Lahore 54000, Pakistan.
   [Ali, Shahid] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Sch Management Sci & Engn, Nanjing 210044, Peoples R China.
   [Jadoon, Atif Khan] Univ Punjab, Sch Econ, Lahore 54000, Punjab, Pakistan.
C3 University of Lahore; Virtual University of Pakistan; Nanjing University
   of Information Science & Technology; University of Punjab
RP Ali, S (corresponding author), Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Sch Management Sci & Engn, Nanjing 210044, Peoples R China.
EM aamirazeem@vu.edu.pk; iqra4ever@gmail.com; naveed.hassan@vu.edu.pk;
   ijaz.butt@vu.edu.pk; toseefaslam@vu.edu.pk; shahidali24@hotmail.com;
   atifkhaneco@pu.edu.pk
RI NASEEM, MUHAMMAD/LRC-8745-2024; Hassan, Naveed/D-6284-2015; Ali,
   Shahid/AAE-6195-2022
OI Naseem, Muhammad Akram/0000-0001-9817-9464; Aslam, Muhammad
   Toseef/0000-0002-3619-624X; Ali, Shahid/0000-0001-9242-2136
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NR 28
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 8
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 0944-1344
EI 1614-7499
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLLUT R
JI Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res.
PD JAN
PY 2023
VL 30
IS 5
BP 11431
EP 11442
DI 10.1007/s11356-022-22885-1
EA SEP 2022
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA I5TD6
UT WOS:000852939300016
PM 36094706
OA Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jarillo, S
   Barnett, J
AF Jarillo, Sergio
   Barnett, Jon
TI Repositioning the (Is)land: Climate Change Adaptation and the Atoll
   Assemblage
SO ANTIPODE
LA English
DT Article
DE oceanocentrism; culture; land; sea-level rise; small islands; well-being
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; ISLANDS; MIGRATION; FRAMEWORK; RETHINKING; IDENTITY;
   ECOLOGY; CULTURE; TUVALU; VALUES
AB Sinking atolls are an enduring symbol of the power of climate change to destroy inhabited places. Climate impact science and the media share a panoptic gaze on atoll islands seeing them as being small, inert and passive in the face of rising seas. The focus in these accounts is on the power of water as the agent of destruction, while the agency of the assemblage of human and non-human actors that is the (is)land itself is ignored. Thus, atolls are said to be vulnerable, and the prevailing ideas of adaptation are either international relocation to avoid the sea or seawalls to contain it. Based on qualitative field research in Pacific atolls, this paper examines the connections between island peoples and their terrestrial environments, and the work that they are doing in response to the impacts of climate change. It shows how land is conceived symbolically, socio-culturally and legally, and considers its role in sustaining livelihoods and anchoring identities through a changing climate.
C1 [Jarillo, Sergio; Barnett, Jon] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
C3 University of Melbourne
RP Jarillo, S (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, Melbourne, Vic, Australia.
EM sergio.jarillo@unimelb.edu.au; jbarn@unimelb.edu.au
RI Barnett, Jon/AAQ-9002-2021
OI Jarillo, Sergio/0000-0001-6533-5694
FU Australian Research Council [FL180100040]; Constantine Niarchos
   Foundation; Kalbfleisch Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at the American
   Museum of Natural History; Australian Research Council [FL180100040]
   Funding Source: Australian Research Council
FX Kari katuwai MinBuzibuz and kommol tata to the people of Budibudi and
   Namdrik atolls, and in particular to Manu and Iwa in PNG and to the late
   Mattlan Zackhras in the RMI, as well as to Wisely Zackhras, Clarence
   Luther and Alden Luther. Kari to Harris Bagita for so many insightful
   comments and for helping with research in Budibudi. Thank you to Jenny
   Newell, Principal Investigator for the Niarchos project in the RMI, and
   to the other members of the research team Tina Stege and Mark Stege.
   Thanks also to Elissa Waters for your support and to Celia McMichael for
   giving comments on earlier versions of this manuscript. Research leading
   to this paper was funded by the Australian Research Council project
   FL180100040, the Constantine Niarchos Foundation ("Analysing the
   dynamics shaping community responses to climate change in the Republic
   of the Marshall Islands, 2016") and the Kalbfleisch Postdoctoral
   Research Fellowship at the American Museum of Natural History.
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NR 110
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 8
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0066-4812
EI 1467-8330
J9 ANTIPODE
JI Antipode
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 54
IS 3
BP 848
EP 872
DI 10.1111/anti.12814
EA MAR 2022
PG 25
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA 0O2WL
UT WOS:000762572900001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Foshag, K
   Aeschbach, N
   Höfle, B
   Winkler, R
   Siegmund, A
   Aeschbach, W
AF Foshag, Kathrin
   Aeschbach, Nicole
   Hoefle, Bernhard
   Winkler, Raino
   Siegmund, Alexander
   Aeschbach, Werner
TI Viability of public spaces in cities under increasing heat: A
   transdisciplinary approach
SO SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Urban climate; Urban environment;
   Transdisciplinary sustainability research; Heat stress; Public places;
   Health improvement
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; THERMAL COMFORT; URBAN; ADAPTATION; ENVIRONMENT;
   REDUCTION; MORTALITY; HEALTH
AB Cities are particularly sensitive to the effects of climate change, causing an increasing incidence of heat waves. Extreme temperatures can impair the use of public spaces in cities, as heat stress endangers human well-being and health. Identifying suitable adaptation measures to maintain the full functionality of public spaces requires a multidimensional approach, accounting for interrelated scientific, social, and practical aspects. As one result we introduce an inter- and transdisciplinary concept that addresses the challenge of adapting public spaces to climate change. Additionally we present a pilot study from Heidelberg, Germany, where a new, sustainable urban quarter experienced more pronounced heat stress than the historic city centre in the hot and dry summer of 2018. The study shows the suitability of our approach to identify appropriate heat adaptation measures. Solar potential modelling and mental map surveys proved to be particularly effective methods. We find that adaptation measures generate synergy effects by improving both climatic and social conditions.
C1 [Foshag, Kathrin; Aeschbach, Nicole] Heidelberg Univ, TdLab Geog, Inst Geog, Neuenheimer Feld 368, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Foshag, Kathrin; Aeschbach, Werner] Heidelberg Univ, Inst Environm Phys, Neuenheimer Feld 229, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Foshag, Kathrin] Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Sch Educ, Vossstr 2,Bldg 4330, D-69115 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Hoefle, Bernhard] Heidelberg Univ, 3D Geospatial Data Proc 3DGeo Res Grp, Inst Geog, Neuenheimer Feld 368, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Winkler, Raino] City Heidelberg, Off Environm Protect Trade Supervis & Energy, Kornmarkt 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Siegmund, Alexander] Heidelberg Univ Educ, Dept Geog, Res Grp Earth Observat Rgeo, Czernyring 22-10-12, D-69115 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Siegmund, Alexander] Heidelberg Univ Educ, UNESCO Chair World Heritage & Biosphere Reserve O, Czernyring 22-10-12, D-69115 Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Aeschbach, Nicole; Hoefle, Bernhard; Siegmund, Alexander; Aeschbach, Werner] Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Ctr Environm HCE, Neuenheimer Feld 229, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
C3 Ruprecht Karls University Heidelberg; Ruprecht Karls University
   Heidelberg; Ruprecht Karls University Heidelberg; Ruprecht Karls
   University Heidelberg; Ruprecht Karls University Heidelberg; Ruprecht
   Karls University Heidelberg; Ruprecht Karls University Heidelberg
RP Foshag, K (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, TdLab Geog, Inst Geog, Neuenheimer Feld 368, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.; Foshag, K (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, Inst Environm Phys, Neuenheimer Feld 229, D-69120 Heidelberg, Germany.; Foshag, K (corresponding author), Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Sch Educ, Vossstr 2,Bldg 4330, D-69115 Heidelberg, Germany.
EM kathrin.leutz@iup.uni-heidelberg.de
RI Aeschbach, Nicole/AAC-9458-2021; Aeschbach, Werner/C-1026-2008; Hofle,
   Bernhard/A-4702-2010
OI Aeschbach, Nicole/0000-0002-4479-3407; Aeschbach,
   Werner/0000-0003-0917-1239; Hofle, Bernhard/0000-0001-5849-1461; Foshag,
   Kathrin/0000-0002-8610-2563
FU Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) of Germany [FKZ:
   01DO19001]; Heidelberg School of Education (Heidelberg University);
   Heidelberg School of Education (University of Education Heidelberg,
   Germany); Federal Ministry of Education and Research(BMBF) of Germany
   [01JA1517A/01JA1517B]; Heidelberg School of Education
FX Sincere thanks are given to the City of Heidelberg, especially Christoph
   Czolbe, Sabine Lachenicht, Hubert Zimmerer, and colleagues for
   supporting different parts of the project. We thank Timo Mifka from
   Heidelberg University as well as Martin Gei ss ler and Tim Szpalecki
   from the City of Heidelberg for providing access to the measuring areas,
   Helmut Scheu-Hachtel and Zarko Peranic from the LUBW for support in data
   provisioning. Further we would like to thank Viktoria Reith and the
   staff of the Department of Geography of Heidelberg University of
   Education for their support in the measurements, equipment provision and
   surveys. We thank Vivien Zahs for support in the application of solar
   modelling. Many thanks are given to Jack G. Williams for advice on the
   initial draft and proofreading of the manuscript. We gratefully
   acknowledge fruitful discussions and inspiration provided by Michael
   Stauffacher (USYS TdLab ETH Zurich). This work was partly funded by the
   Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) of Germany in the
   framework of the project ER3DS (FKZ: 01DO19001). Funding for the project
   (position of K.F.) was provided by the Heidelberg School of Education
   (Heidelberg University and University of Education Heidelberg, Germany)
   funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research(BMBF) of
   Germany (01JA1517A/01JA1517B). A publication grant was also provided by
   the Heidelberg School of Education.
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NR 72
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 5
U2 39
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2210-6707
EI 2210-6715
J9 SUSTAIN CITIES SOC
JI Sust. Cities Soc.
PD AUG
PY 2020
VL 59
AR 102215
DI 10.1016/j.scs.2020.102215
PG 10
WC Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Energy & Fuels
GA LU0OJ
UT WOS:000537462900013
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rolsted, M
   Raju, E
AF Rolsted, Morten
   Raju, Emmanuel
TI Addressing capacities of local communities in a changing context in
   Nepal
SO DISASTER PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Governance; Capacity; Disaster risk reduction; Climate change adaptation
ID DISASTER RISK REDUCTION; GOVERNANCE
AB Purpose - The field study aimed at exploring how capacities are influenced by external factors in the context of community-based disaster risk reduction (CBDRR).
   Design/methodology/approach - The field study was conducted in a small rural area called Lapsibot in Lamjung district in Nepal. The article is based on a fieldwork conducted in April 2018. The different tools of data collection were inspired by the vulnerability and capacity assessment approach with a focus on various aspects of vulnerabilities and capacities with regard to disaster risk reduction (DRR) in Lapsibot.
   Findings - The paper highlights that communities, in fact, need enhanced and extended capacities, not only existing inherent capacities, which are usually the main subject of capacity development in rural communities.
   Originality/value - While there is absolutely no question of strong capacities at the community level, this paper appeals for a more in-depth investigation of an extended notion of capacities, where the effects of the rapid changes and increasing impact of the outside world are taken into consideration.
C1 [Rolsted, Morten] Univ Copenhagen, Global Hlth Sect, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Rolsted, Morten; Raju, Emmanuel] Univ Copenhagen, Copenhagen Ctr Disaster Res, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Raju, Emmanuel] Univ Copenhagen, Global Hlth Sect, Dept Publ Hlth, Copenhagen, Denmark.
C3 University of Copenhagen; University of Copenhagen; University of
   Copenhagen
RP Rolsted, M (corresponding author), Univ Copenhagen, Global Hlth Sect, Copenhagen, Denmark.; Rolsted, M (corresponding author), Univ Copenhagen, Copenhagen Ctr Disaster Res, Copenhagen, Denmark.
EM mortenrolsted@gmail.com
OI RAJU, EMMANUEL/0000-0002-2348-1850
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NR 38
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 10
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI Leeds
PA floor 5, Northspring 21-23 Wellington Street, Leeds, W YORKSHIRE,
   ENGLAND
SN 0965-3562
EI 1758-6100
J9 DISASTER PREV MANAG
JI Disaster Prev. Manag.
PD AUG 3
PY 2020
VL 29
IS 4
BP 485
EP 495
DI 10.1108/DPM-05-2020-0137
EA JUN 2020
PG 11
WC Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health;
   Management
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Business & Economics
GA PB6UC
UT WOS:000539694100001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nakagawa, Y
   Onoue, Y
   Kawahara, S
   Araki, F
   Koyamada, K
   Matsuoka, D
   Ishikawa, Y
   Fujita, M
   Sugimoto, S
   Okada, Y
   Kawazoe, S
   Watanabe, S
   Ishii, M
   Mizuta, R
   Murata, A
   Kawase, H
AF Nakagawa, Yujin
   Onoue, Yosuke
   Kawahara, Shitnaro
   Araki, Fumiaki
   Koyamada, Koji
   Matsuoka, Daisuke
   Ishikawa, Yoichi
   Fujita, Mikiko
   Sugimoto, Shiori
   Okada, Yasuko
   Kawazoe, Sho
   Watanabe, Shingo
   Ishii, Masayoshi
   Mizuta, Ryo
   Murata, Akihiko
   Kawase, Hiroaki
TI Development of a system for efficient content-based retrieval to analyze
   large volumes of climate data
SO PROGRESS IN EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate data; Relational database; Web application
AB Analyses of large ensemble data on future climate are significantly useful for the probabilistic future projection of climate change in various interdisciplinary fields. However, the data volume of the Database for Policy Decision making for Future climate change or d4PDF, which is a mega-ensemble dataset, exceeds similar to 3 PB, which is too large to download to local computers. To allow users for retrieve and downloading necessary data, we developed a user-friendly system called "System for Efficient content-based retrieval to Analyze Large volume climate data" (SEAL) under the Social Implementation Program on Climate Change Adaptation Technology (SI-CAT). Conventional web-based retrieval systems allow retrievals using metadata associated with a data file itself. In contrast, SEAL allows the users to retrieve the necessary data by using metadata associated with contents, such as physical values, of a data file. We confirmed that SEAL can reduce data sizes and total time required for obtaining necessary data to less than 0.5% and 1%, respectively, compared to conventional web-based retrieval systems.
C1 [Nakagawa, Yujin; Kawahara, Shitnaro; Araki, Fumiaki; Matsuoka, Daisuke; Ishikawa, Yoichi] Japan Agcy Marine Earth Sci & Technol, Res Inst Value Added Informat Generat, Kanazawa Ku, 3173-25 Showa Machi, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2360001, Japan.
   [Onoue, Yosuke] Nihon Univ, Coll Humanities & Sci, Setagaya Ku, 3-25-40 Sakurajosui, Tokyo 1568550, Japan.
   [Koyamada, Koji] Kyoto Univ, Acad Ctr Comp & Media Studies, Sakyo Ku, Kyoto 6068501, Japan.
   [Fujita, Mikiko; Sugimoto, Shiori; Okada, Yasuko; Watanabe, Shingo] Japan Agcy Marine Earth Sci & Technol, Res Inst Global Change, Kanazawa Ku, 3173-25 Showa Machi, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2360001, Japan.
   [Kawazoe, Sho] Hokkaido Univ, Lab Meteorol, Kita Ku, N10W8, Sapporo, Hokkaido 0600810, Japan.
   [Ishii, Masayoshi; Mizuta, Ryo; Murata, Akihiko; Kawase, Hiroaki] Japan Meteorol Agcy, Meteorol Res Inst, 1-1 Nagamine, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 3050052, Japan.
C3 Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science & Technology (JAMSTEC); Nihon
   University; Kyoto University; Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science &
   Technology (JAMSTEC); Hokkaido University; Japan Meteorological Agency;
   Meteorological Research Institute - Japan
RP Nakagawa, Y (corresponding author), Japan Agcy Marine Earth Sci & Technol, Res Inst Value Added Informat Generat, Kanazawa Ku, 3173-25 Showa Machi, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2360001, Japan.
EM nakagawa.yujin@jamstec.go.jp
RI Kawahara, Shintaro/GWV-9979-2022; Kawazoe, Sho/AAD-7289-2022; Nakagawa,
   Yujin/JQX-2722-2023; Watanabe, Shingo/L-9689-2014; Kawazoe,
   Sho/B-9200-2017
OI Watanabe, Shingo/0000-0002-2228-0088; Kawazoe, Sho/0000-0003-3051-0100;
   Onoue, Yosuke/0000-0003-2739-3249; Matsuoka,
   Daisuke/0000-0003-3306-5997; Nakagawa, Yujin/0000-0002-3834-228X
FU Social Implementation Program on Climate Change Adaptation Technology
   (SI-CAT)
FX This work was supported by the Social Implementation Program on Climate
   Change Adaptation Technology (SI-CAT).
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NR 7
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 3
PU SPRINGEROPEN
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 2197-4284
J9 PROG EARTH PLANET SC
JI Prog. Earth Planet. Sci.
PD FEB 26
PY 2020
VL 7
IS 1
AR 9
DI 10.1186/s40645-019-0315-9
PG 10
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA KO5TY
UT WOS:000515613400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sauer, I
   Roca, E
   Villares, M
AF Sauer, Inga
   Roca, Elisabet
   Villares, Miriam
TI Beach Users' Perceptions of Coastal Regeneration Projects as An
   Adaptation Strategy in The Western Mediterranean
SO JOURNAL OF HOSPITALITY & TOURISM RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE beach users; coastal management; climate change adaptation; dune
   regeneration
ID PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS; MANAGED REALIGNMENT; FLOOD PROTECTION; URBAN;
   EROSION; QUALITY; HEALTH; INFRASTRUCTURE; RESILIENCE; ECOSYSTEMS
AB Some coastal environments facing climate change risks are starting to be managed with nature-based solutions (NBS). Strategies based on the rehabilitation of green infrastructures in coastal municipalities, such as renaturalization of seafronts, are considered adaptive to the effects of climate change but may cause misconceptions that could lead to social conflicts between the tourist sector and the society. A survey was carried out to study user perceptions on the effects of climate change, preferences for adaptation strategies, and the assessment of projects of dune reconstruction. We find that while beach users recognize the benefits of NBS for environmental conservation and storm protection, they show little concern about possible effects of climate change on recreational activity and have limited understanding about the protective capacity of NBS. Thus, a greater effort must be made to better explain the effects of climate change and the potential benefits of NBS in coastal risk management.
C1 [Sauer, Inga] Univ Politecn Catalunya Barcelona Tech, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Roca, Elisabet; Villares, Miriam] Univ Politecn Catalunya Barcelona Tech, Sch Civil Engineers Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
C3 Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya; Universitat Politecnica de
   Catalunya
RP Sauer, I (corresponding author), Univ Politecn Catalunya Barcelona Tech, Barcelona, Spain.
EM inga.josefine.sauer@estudiant.upc.edu; elisabet.roca@upc.edu;
   miriam.villares@upc.edu
FU Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (MINECO/AEI/FEDER)
   [CTM2011-29808, CTM2017-83655-C2-1-R]
FX This research was performed in the framework of the PaiRisC-M project
   (CTM2011-29808) and the M-CoastAdapt project (CTM2017-83655-C2-1-R),
   funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation
   (MINECO/AEI/FEDER).
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NR 56
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 6
U2 8
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 1096-3480
EI 1557-7554
J9 J HOSP TOUR RES
JI J. Hosp. Tour. Res.
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 46
IS 3
BP 418
EP 441
AR 1096348019889112
DI 10.1177/1096348019889112
EA NOV 2019
PG 24
WC Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA ZI5GN
UT WOS:000499751500001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Neset, TS
   Wiréhn, L
   Klein, N
   Käyhkö, J
   Juhola, S
AF Neset, Tina-Simone
   Wirehn, Lotten
   Klein, Natacha
   Kayhko, Janina
   Juhola, Sirkku
TI Maladaptation in Nordic agriculture
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Negative consequences; Vulnerability;
   Farmers; Sweden; Finland
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; IMPACT; RISK; STRATEGIES; POTATO
AB Climatic changes are expected to pose challenges to Nordic agriculture. While some changes may provide opportunities for higher productivity, others may severely increase agricultural vulnerability. Farmers attempt to adapt or cope with these changes by taking measures to decrease vulnerability or to take advantage of potential benefits, but little is known what outcomes these adaptation measures might have. This study identifies unintended negative impacts of adaptation measures, drawing on a literature review and interviews with farmers and agricultural officials and experts in Sweden and Finland. Based on the conceptual framework of maladaptation, this study identifies outcomes that either increase the vulnerability of the implementing actor, shift the vulnerability to other actors or sectors or affect common pool resources. While a large number of adaptation measures rebound vulnerability to the implementing actor, several potential maladaptive outcomes may shift vulnerability or affect common pool resources. The findings point to the large number of trade-offs that are involved in adaptation decision-making and lead to the conclusion that raising awareness of these aspects can support future adaptation strategies.
C1 [Neset, Tina-Simone; Wirehn, Lotten; Klein, Natacha; Juhola, Sirkku] Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Kayhko, Janina; Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Ecosyst & Environm Res Programme, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Kayhko, Janina; Juhola, Sirkku] Univ Helsinki, Helsinki Inst Sustainabil Sci HELSUS, Helsinki, Finland.
C3 Linkoping University; University of Helsinki; University of Helsinki
RP Neset, TS (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, Linkoping, Sweden.
EM tina.neset@liu.se; lotten.wirehn@liu.se; janina.kayhko@helsinki.fi;
   sirkku.juhola@helsinki.fi
RI Käyhkö, Janina/AAW-6163-2021; Juhola, Sirkku/IXW-8093-2023; Klein,
   Natacha/AAC-9270-2021
OI Kayhko, Janina/0000-0003-0904-5857; Wirehn, Lotten/0000-0003-4014-1441;
   Juhola, Sirkku/0000-0003-0095-2282; Klein, Natacha/0000-0001-8503-088X;
   Neset, Tina-Simone/0000-0003-1151-9943
FU Swedish Research Council FORMAS [2013-1557]; Nordic Centre of Excellence
   for Strategic Adaptation Research (NORD-STAR) - Norden Top-Level
   Research Initiative sub-programme 'Effect studies and adaptation to
   climate change'
FX This paper is funded by the Swedish Research Council FORMAS under Grant
   [No. 2013-1557]. The work has also been supported by the Nordic Centre
   of Excellence for Strategic Adaptation Research (NORD-STAR), which is
   funded by the Norden Top-Level Research Initiative sub-programme 'Effect
   studies and adaptation to climate change.'
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NR 63
TC 45
Z9 49
U1 3
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2019
VL 23
BP 78
EP 87
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2018.12.003
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA HO5BT
UT WOS:000460938500008
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adam, HN
   Kjosavik, DJ
   Shanmugaratnam, N
AF Adam, Hans Nicolai
   Kjosavik, Darley Jose
   Shanmugaratnam, Nadarajah
TI Adaptation trajectories and challenges in the Western Ghats: A case
   study of Attappady, south India
SO JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Vulnerability; Rural development; India
ID GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; VULNERABILITY; LIVELIHOODS;
   RESPONSES; LIMITS
AB Climate change adaptation has become an important aspect of research and policy agendas at different scales - globally, nationally and locally. One stream of thought relates to the thematic area of barriers or challenges that adaptation faces. This article explores local adaptation trajectories and challenges in a tribal development block in south India. Through the lens of key livelihood strategies pursued in the block - namely income from development interventions, migration and on-farm strategies - it explores the challenges and factors that contribute or have contributed, to impeding successful adaptation outcomes in Attappady. The article argues that development interventions (i.e planned adaptations) have not succeeded in addressing structural causes of vulnerability; they have, however, provided an important coping mechanism. Migration is a socially and culturally differentiated phenomenon and is not a viable diversification option for the most vulnerable population segments in Attappady. Finally, it is found that recent on-farm adaptation strategies present a case of maladaptation that promote marginalisation and are ill-suited to the local ecological and cultural landscape.
C1 [Adam, Hans Nicolai; Kjosavik, Darley Jose; Shanmugaratnam, Nadarajah] Norwegian Univ Life Sci NMBU, Dept Int Environm & Dev Studies Noragric, POB 5003, N-1432 As, Norway.
C3 Norwegian University of Life Sciences
RP Adam, HN (corresponding author), Norwegian Univ Life Sci NMBU, Dept Int Environm & Dev Studies Noragric, POB 5003, N-1432 As, Norway.
EM hans.adam@nmbu.no; darley.kjosavik@nmbu.no; n.shanmugaratnam@nmbu.no
RI Adam, Hans/AAG-7786-2021
OI Adam, Hans/0000-0001-9810-5262
FU Norwegian University of Life Sciences; Department of International
   Environment and Development Studies
FX This research did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies
   in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors. But we would like
   to thank the Norwegian University of Life Sciences and the Department of
   International Environment and Development Studies for the research
   support under its PhD programme..
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NR 69
TC 11
Z9 13
U1 1
U2 18
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0743-0167
EI 1873-1392
J9 J RURAL STUD
JI J. Rural Stud.
PD JUL
PY 2018
VL 61
BP 1
EP 11
DI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2018.05.002
PG 11
WC Geography; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Public Administration
GA GO6BV
UT WOS:000440120000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Halofsky, JE
   Peterson, DL
   Dante-Wood, SK
   Hoang, L
AF Halofsky, Jessica E.
   Peterson, David L.
   Dante-Wood, S. Karen
   Hoang, Linh
BE Halofsky, JE
   Peterson, DL
TI Toward Climate-Smart Resource Management in the Northern Rockies
SO CLIMATE CHANGE AND ROCKY MOUNTAIN ECOSYSTEMS
SE Advances in Global Change Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Adaptation; Management planning; Implementation; Science-management
   partnerships; Organizational capacity
AB The Northern Rockies Adaptation Partnership facilitated the largest climate change adaptation effort on public lands to date, including participants from federal agencies and stakeholder organizations interested in a broad range of resource issues. It achieved specific goals of national climate change strategies for the U.S. Forest Service and National Park Service, providing a scientific foundation for resource management and planning in the Northern Rockies. The large number of adaptation strategies and tactics, many of which are a component of current management practice, provide a pathway for slowing the rate of deleterious change in resource conditions. Rapid implementation of adaptation-in land management plans, National Environmental Policy Act documents, project plans, and restoration-will help maintain functionality of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems in the Northern Rockies, as well as build the organizational capacity of federal agencies to incorporate climate change in their mission of sustainable resource management. Long-term monitoring will help detect potential climate change effects on natural resources, and evaluate the effectiveness of adaptation options that have been implemented.
C1 [Halofsky, Jessica E.] Univ Washington, Sch Environm & Forest Sci, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
   [Peterson, David L.] US Forest Serv, Pacific Northwest Res Stn, Seattle, WA USA.
   [Dante-Wood, S. Karen] US Forest Serv, Off Sustainabil & Climate, Washington, DC 20250 USA.
   [Hoang, Linh] US Forest Serv, Missoula, MT USA.
C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; United
   States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States Forest Service;
   United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States Forest
   Service; United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States
   Forest Service
RP Halofsky, JE (corresponding author), Univ Washington, Sch Environm & Forest Sci, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
EM jhalo@uw.edu; peterson@fs.fed.us; skdante@fs.fed.us; lhoang@fs.fed.us
CR [Anonymous], 2011, PNWGTR855 US FOR SER
   [Anonymous], 1976, US PRES PROJ STAND
   Halofsky J.E., 2017, PNWGTR939 US FOR SER
   Halofsky J. E., 2011, PNWGTR844 US FOR SER
   Halofsky JE, 2016, ATMOSPHERE-BASEL, V7, DOI 10.3390/atmos7030046
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   U.S. Forest Service (USFS), 2010, NAT ROADM RESP CLIM
NR 11
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 3
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1574-0919
BN 978-3-319-56928-4; 978-3-319-56927-7
J9 ADV GLOB CHANGE RES
JI Adv. Glob. Change Res.
PY 2018
VL 63
BP 221
EP 228
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-56928-4_12
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-56928-4
PG 8
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BK5SH
UT WOS:000439510600014
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thorarinsdottir, TL
   Guttorp, P
   Drews, M
   Kaspersen, PS
   de Bruin, K
AF Thorarinsdottir, T. L.
   Guttorp, P.
   Drews, M.
   Kaspersen, P. Skougaard
   de Bruin, K.
TI Sea level adaptation decisions under uncertainty
SO WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; FRONTIERS; RISE
AB Sea level rise has serious consequences for harbor infrastructure, storm drains and sewer systems, and many other issues. Adapting to sea level rise requires comparing different possible adaptation strategies, comparing the cost of different actions (including no action), and assessing where and at what point in time the chosen strategy should be implemented. All these decisions must be made under considerable uncertainty in the amount of sea level rise, in the cost and prioritization of adaptation actions, and in the implications of no action. Here we develop two illustrative examples: for Bergen on Norway's west coast and for Esbjerg on the west coast of Denmark, to highlight how technical efforts to understand and quantify uncertainties in hydrologic projections can be coupled with concrete decision-problems framed by the needs of the end-users using statistical formulations. Different components of uncertainty are visualized. We demonstrate the value of uncertainties and show for example that failing to take uncertainty into account can result in the median-projected damage costs being an order of magnitude smaller.
C1 [Thorarinsdottir, T. L.; Guttorp, P.] Norwegian Comp Ctr, Oslo, Norway.
   [Drews, M.; Kaspersen, P. Skougaard] Tech Univ Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [de Bruin, K.] Ctr Int Climate & Environm Res, Oslo, Norway.
   [de Bruin, K.] Wageningen Environm Netherlands Res, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Technical University of Denmark
RP Thorarinsdottir, TL (corresponding author), Norwegian Comp Ctr, Oslo, Norway.
EM thordis@nr.no
RI Kaspersen, Per/T-1677-2017; Drews, Martin/E-8081-2017
OI Guttorp, Peter/0000-0002-5620-4200; Drews, Martin/0000-0002-3532-4780;
   Thorarinsdottir, Thordis/0000-0001-6702-0469; de Bruin,
   Karianne/0000-0002-3719-0579
FU NordForsk [74456]; Research Council of Norway [243953]; Direct For
   Mathematical & Physical Scien; Division Of Mathematical Sciences
   [1401793] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX This work was funded by NordForsk through project number 74456
   "Statistical Analysis of Climate Projections" (eSACP) and The Research
   Council of Norway through project number 243953 "Physical and
   Statistical Analysis of Climate Extremes in Large Datasets" (ClimateXL).
   The authors thank four anonymous reviewers for thoughtful, constructive
   comments which substantially improved the paper. The source code for the
   analysis is implemented in the statistical programming language R [R
   Core Team, 2016] and is available on GitHub at
   http://github.com/eSACP/SeaLevelDecisions/Code together with the local
   sea level projection data and the damage cost data for Bergen.
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NR 45
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 0
U2 9
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
SN 0043-1397
EI 1944-7973
J9 WATER RESOUR RES
JI Water Resour. Res.
PD OCT
PY 2017
VL 53
IS 10
BP 8147
EP 8163
DI 10.1002/2016WR020354
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Limnology; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Water
   Resources
GA FR0FE
UT WOS:000418736000002
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gohari, A
   Mirchi, A
   Madani, K
AF Gohari, Alireza
   Mirchi, Ali
   Madani, Kaveh
TI System Dynamics Evaluation of Climate Change Adaptation Strategies for
   Water Resources Management in Central Iran
SO WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Systemdynamics; Water resources;
   Zayandeh-Rud River basin
ID CHANGE IMPACTS; FOOD SECURITY; PERFORMANCE; CHALLENGES; TRENDS
AB The Zayandeh-Rud River basin, Iran, is projected to face spatiotemporally heterogeneous temperature increase and precipitation reduction that will decrease water supply by mid-century. With projected increase (0.70-1.03 degrees C) in spring temperature and reduction (6-55%) in winter precipitation, the upper Zayandeh-Rud sub-basin, the main source of renewable water supply, will likely become warmer and drier. In the lower sub-basin, 1.1-1.5 degrees C increase in temperature and 11-31% decrease in annual precipitation are likely. A system dynamics model was used to analyze adaptation strategies taking into account feedbacks between water resources development and biophysical and socioeconomic sub-systems. Results suggest that infrastructural improvements, rigorous water demand management (e.g., replacing high water demand crops such as rice, corn, and alfalfa), and ecosystem-based regulatory prioritization, complemented by supply augmentation can temporarily alleviate water stress in a basin that is essentially governed by the Limits to Growth archetype.
C1 [Gohari, Alireza] Isfahan Univ Technol, Coll Agr, Dept Water Engn, Esfahan, Iran.
   [Mirchi, Ali] Univ Texas El Paso, Dept Civil Engn, 500 W Univ Ave, El Paso, TX 79968 USA.
   [Mirchi, Ali] Univ Texas El Paso, Ctr Environm Resource Management, 500 W Univ Ave, El Paso, TX 79968 USA.
   [Madani, Kaveh] Imperial Coll London, Ctr Environm Policy, London SW7 2AZ, England.
C3 Isfahan University of Technology; University of Texas System; University
   of Texas El Paso; University of Texas System; University of Texas El
   Paso; Imperial College London
RP Madani, K (corresponding author), Imperial Coll London, Ctr Environm Policy, London SW7 2AZ, England.
EM alirezagohari@gmail.com; amirchi@utep.edu; k.madani@imperial.ac.uk
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NR 69
TC 100
Z9 105
U1 5
U2 56
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0920-4741
EI 1573-1650
J9 WATER RESOUR MANAG
JI Water Resour. Manag.
PD MAR
PY 2017
VL 31
IS 5
BP 1413
EP 1434
DI 10.1007/s11269-017-1575-z
PG 22
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA EQ4JM
UT WOS:000398042800001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McNaught, R
   Warrick, O
   Cooper, A
AF McNaught, Rebecca
   Warrick, Olivia
   Cooper, Andrew
TI Communicating climate change for adaptation in rural communities: a
   Pacific study
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Communication; Community-based adaptation; Disaster risk
   reduction; Developing countries; Pacific
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; ISLANDS
AB The academic literature on climate change communications is growing. However, the majority of this literature focuses on the issue of climate change mitigation in a developed country context, and there is little published material regarding communication in a developing country and adaptation context. Similarly, despite community-based approaches to climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction increasing in the Pacific Islands region, there is very limited guidance on how to effectively communicate climate change in a way that enhances people's resilience. This paper documents the experiences of organisations, including local and international non-government and faith-based organisations, governments, regional technical organisations and donor agencies in communicating climate change for adaptation in the Pacific region. Three key climate change communication challenges are highlighted and suggestions made for overcoming them based on results from interviews, a focus group discussion and an online forum. Finally, recommendations are made for good practice guidance in climate change communication that is empowering and culturally relevant.
C1 [McNaught, Rebecca] Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Ctr, Port Vila, Efate, Vanuatu.
   [Cooper, Andrew] La Trobe Univ, Balwyn North, Vic 3104, Australia.
C3 La Trobe University
RP McNaught, R (corresponding author), Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Ctr, POB 3041, Port Vila, Efate, Vanuatu.
EM mcnaught@climatecentre.org
RI McNaught, Rebecca/AAF-2668-2020
OI McNaught, Rebecca/0000-0002-9393-6398
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NR 50
TC 38
Z9 40
U1 0
U2 60
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD AUG
PY 2014
VL 14
IS 4
BP 1491
EP 1503
DI 10.1007/s10113-014-0592-1
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AM3EX
UT WOS:000339736700017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Deichert, G
   Gedamu, A
   Nemomsa, B
AF Deichert, Georg
   Gedamu, Ashenafi
   Nemomsa, Befikadu
BE Filho, WL
   Simane, B
   Kalangu, J
   Wuta, M
   Munishi, P
   Musiyiwa, K
TI Role of Sustainable Land Management (SLM) in Adapting to Climate
   Variability Through Agricultural Practices-Experiences from Ethiopian
   Highlands
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION IN AFRICA: FOSTERING RESILIENCE AND CAPACITY
   TO ADAPT
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Symposium on Climate Change Adaptation in Africa
CY FEB, 2016
CL Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Addis Ababa, ETHIOPIA
SP Addis Ababa Univ, Hamburg Univ Appl Sci, Res & Transfer Ctr Applicat Life Sci, Int Climate Change Informat Programme
HO Manchester Metropolitan Univ
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   [Gedamu, Ashenafi; Nemomsa, Befikadu] GIZ SLM, EU Global Climate Change Alliance GCCA E Project, Rahem Bldg,Diaspora Sq,POB 100009, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
RP Deichert, G (corresponding author), GIZ Sustainable Land Management Programme, Rahem Bldg,Diaspora Sq,POB 100009, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
EM georg.deichert@giz.de
FU EU, GCCA
FX Special thanks to EU, GCCA project funder and MoANR at federal and
   regional offices and the farmers in the respective regions who
   participated in piloting and testing of climate relevant practices.
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NR 16
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 1
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-49520-0; 978-3-319-49519-4
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2017
BP 475
EP 492
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-49520-0_29
PG 18
WC Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BJ5QL
UT WOS:000426188100029
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jovic, BS
   Cucakovic, AA
   Grbic, MN
AF Jovic, Biljana Stanislav
   Cucakovic, Aleksandar Acim
   Grbic, Mihailo Nebojsa
TI Circle in Space-Space in Circle: A Study of Ratio between Open Space and
   Built-Up Area in Historical Circular Objects
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE circular objects; open space; built-up area; morphospace analysis;
   doughnut objects
ID CULTURAL-HERITAGE; CITIES; DESIGN; MODEL
AB Many cities nowadays explore different circular designs as new sustainable city concepts in different urban aspects. The new trend, as part of the adaptation for climate change, is a strategy of increasing the number of urban open spaces, and circular plan design could be a sustainable approach to urban development. This paper provides a historical overview of various examples of circular objects containing built structures and open spaces from the Neolithic to the present. The Built-Up Area (BUA) and Open Space (OS) relationships are shown histogramically for 36 objects arranged chronologically. The morphospace analysis was performed to determine any possible regularity in the relationships of parts of circular objects. For the purpose of this research, three variables were chosen. First, all selected historical examples of circular objects were divided into two main categories: objects with a total diameter smaller than 300 m and objects with a total diameter bigger than 300 m. Additionally, the selected circular objects were divided by their type of open space to better understand their spatial position. The largest number of analyzed objects belongs to the Parks-Gardens category, followed by settlements, and then earth works, sacral objects and circular buildings, with the smallest number of circular objects being in the category of allotments and plazas. The second variable was Jam area and % of Jam. The buildings are of different sizes up to several hundred m(2), and the areas range up to several hundred ha. The total area to OS ratio ranges from 0% (for Large Serdab) to 100% (for multiple objects). There is a similar situation with the diameter ratios (total and "jam"). Additionally, the final variable was the historical position of the selected circular objects. Circular objects belong to all historical periods from the Neolithic to the present. The aim of this research was to explore the relationship between OS and BUA in various circular objects with different diameters of open spaces and find out if there was any regularity in this relationship. The morphospace analysis of this research indicates that there is no clear regularity in the relationship between the built-up area and the open space, but the aspects and research results shown here contribute to sustainability since the circular design approach could play a key role in future circular design processes.
C1 [Jovic, Biljana Stanislav; Grbic, Mihailo Nebojsa] Univ Belgrade, Dept Landscape Architecture & Hort, Fac Forestry, Belgrade 11000, Serbia.
   [Cucakovic, Aleksandar Acim] Univ Belgrade, Dept Math Phys & Descript Geometry, Fac Civil Engn, Belgrade 11000, Serbia.
C3 University of Belgrade; University of Belgrade
RP Jovic, BS (corresponding author), Univ Belgrade, Dept Landscape Architecture & Hort, Fac Forestry, Belgrade 11000, Serbia.
EM biljana.jovic@sfb.bg.ac.rs; cucak@grf.bg.ac.rs;
   mihailo.grbic@sfb.bg.ac.rs
RI Jović, Biljana/ABI-3147-2020
OI Jovic, Biljana/0000-0001-6017-772X
FU Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the
   Republic of Serbia [TP 36008, 451-02-68/2020/14/2000169]
FX The authors are supported by the Ministry of Education, Science and
   Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia, Project No. TP
   36008 (451-02-68/2020/14/2000169).
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NR 60
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 7
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAY
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 9
AR 4662
DI 10.3390/su13094662
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SC8RM
UT WOS:000650930800001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tian, ZH
   Qin, TL
   Wang, HL
   Li, YZ
   Yan, S
   Hou, J
   Li, CH
   Abebe, SA
AF Tian, Zihao
   Qin, Tianling
   Wang, Huiliang
   Li, Yizhe
   Yan, Sheng
   Hou, Jun
   Li, Chenhao
   Abebe, Sintayehu A. A.
TI Delayed response of net primary productivity with climate change in the
   Yiluo River basin
SO FRONTIERS IN EARTH SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE net primary productivity; climatic factor; temporal and spatial
   distribution; correlation; time-lag effect
ID SPATIOTEMPORAL VARIATION; VEGETATION DYNAMICS; CHINA; VARIABILITY;
   TEMPERATURE; REGION
AB Climatic factors are the main drivers that change net primary productivity (NPP). We chose the Yiluo River Basin as the study area to investigate the response of NPP to climatic factors in the Yellow River's middle reaches. The temporal and spatial distribution of net primary productivity and the trend change of slope in the basin from 2000 to 2020 are analyzed. In addition, we analyzed the correlation between the NPP and climatic factors (precipitation and temperature) and the time-lag effect. The results show that 1) the annual average NPP in the basin is 556.4 gC/m(2)/a, the maximum value that occurred in 2019. Most of the NPP's mutation points in the basin's forest appeared in 2004, while the NPP's mutation points in arable land mostly appeared in 2008 and 2009. 2) The slope trend analysis result of NPP from 2000 to 2020 shows that the NPP in 67.88% of the basin shows a significant increasing trend, 3.8% of the basin shows a significant decrease, and the other area show no significant change. 3) The correlation analysis between NPP and climatic factors shows a positive correlation between precipitation and NPP in 62.3% of the basin and a positive correlation between air temperature and NPP in 62.5%. The response of NPP to precipitation and temperature in the basin has different degrees of a time-lag effect. The NPP has a time-lag effect on precipitation in 44.8% of the basin, and its mean lag time is 8 days. NPP has a time-lag effect on temperature in 55.7% of the basin, and its mean lag time is 1 day. This study is beneficial to understanding the influence of climatic factor change on vegetation activities in the Yiluo River Basin. Our study illustrates the significance of time lag in analyzing the relationship between NPP and climatic factors. Furthermore, it provides support for scientific vegetation regulation and allocation, as well as adaptation to climate change in areas similar to the Loess Plateau, based on the lag time distribution corresponding to different vegetation types in different regions of the Yiluo River Basin. After that, these areas' water resources will be fully utilized by vegetation, and ecological restoration could be accelerated.
C1 [Tian, Zihao; Wang, Huiliang; Li, Yizhe; Yan, Sheng; Hou, Jun] Zhengzhou Univ, Sch Hydraul Engn & Civil Engn, Zhengzhou, Peoples R China.
   [Tian, Zihao; Qin, Tianling; Li, Yizhe; Yan, Sheng; Hou, Jun; Li, Chenhao; Abebe, Sintayehu A. A.] China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 Zhengzhou University; China Institute of Water Resources & Hydropower
   Research
RP Qin, TL (corresponding author), China Inst Water Resources & Hydropower Res, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM qintl@iwhr.com
RI wang, huiliang/AAP-3859-2021; Abebe, Sintayehu/M-5802-2018
OI Abebe, Sintayehu/0000-0002-1345-8366; wang, huiliang/0000-0002-6721-0972
FU National Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars [51725905];
   National Natural Science Foundation of China [52130907]; Five Major
   Excellent Talent Programs of China Institute of Water Resources and
   Hydropower Research [WR0199A012021]
FX Funding This work was supported by the National Science Fund for
   Distinguished Young Scholars (Grant No. 51725905), the National Natural
   Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 51879275), The National Natural
   Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 52130907), and the Five Major
   Excellent Talent Programs of China Institute of Water Resources and
   Hydropower Research (Grant No. WR0199A012021).
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NR 45
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 18
U2 75
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-6463
J9 FRONT EARTH SC-SWITZ
JI Front. Earth Sci.
PD JAN 11
PY 2023
VL 10
AR 1017819
DI 10.3389/feart.2022.1017819
PG 15
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA 8F9BW
UT WOS:000919950800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gong, WW
   Li, X
   Zhou, MG
   Zhou, CL
   Xiao, YZ
   Huang, BA
   Lin, LF
   Hu, JX
   Xiao, JP
   Zeng, WL
   He, GH
   Huang, CR
   Liu, T
   Du, QF
   Ma, WJ
AF Gong, Weiwei
   Li, Xing
   Zhou, Maigeng
   Zhou, Chunliang
   Xiao, Yize
   Huang, Biao
   Lin, Lifeng
   Hu, Jianxiong
   Xiao, Jianpeng
   Zeng, Weilin
   He, Guanhao
   Huang, Cunrui
   Liu, Tao
   Du, Qingfeng
   Ma, Wenjun
TI Mortality burden attributable to temperature variability in China
SO JOURNAL OF EXPOSURE SCIENCE AND ENVIRONMENTAL EPIDEMIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Distributed lag non-linear model; Temperature variability; Years of life
   lost; Multivariate meta-analysis
ID TIME-SERIES; IMPACT; VULNERABILITY; DISEASE; RANGE; RISK
AB Background Several studies have investigated the associations between temperature variability (TV) and death counts. However, evidence of TV-attributable years of life lost (YLL) is scarce. Objectives To investigate the associations between TV and YLL rates (/100,000 population), and quantify average life loss per death (LLD) caused by TV in China. Methods We calculated daily YLL rates (/100,000 population) of non-accidental causes and cardiorespiratory diseases by using death data from 364 counties of China during 2006-2017, and collected meteorological data during the same period. A distributed lag non-linear model (DLNM) and multivariate meta-analysis were used to estimate the effects of TV at national or regional levels. Then, we calculated the LLD to quantify the mortality burden of TV. Results U-shaped curves were observed in the associations of YLL rates with TV in China. The minimum YLL TV (MYTV) was 2.5 degrees C nationwide. An average of 0.89 LLD was attributable to TV in total, most of which was from high TV (0.86, 95% CI: 0.56, 1.16). However, TV caused more LLD in the young (<65 years old) (1.87, 95% CI: 1.03, 2.71) than 65-74 years old (0.85, 95% CI: 0.40-1.31) and >= 75 years old (0.40, 95% CI: 0.21-0.59), cerebrovascular disease (0.74, 95% CI: 0.36, 1.11) than respiratory disease (0.54, 95% CI: 0.21, 0.87), South (1.23, 95% CI: 0.77, 1.68) than North (0.41, 95% CI: -0.7, 1.52) and Central China (0.40, 95% CI: -0.02, 0.81). TV-attributed LLD was modified by annual mean temperature, annual mean relative humidity, altitude, latitude, longitude, and education attainment. Significance Our findings indicate that high and low TVs are both associated with increases in premature death, however the majority of LLD was attributable to high TV. TV-related LLD was modified by county level characteristics. TV should be considered in planning adaptation to climate change or variability. Impact We estimated the associations of TV with YLL rates, and quantified the life loss per death (LLD) caused by TV. An average of 0.89 years of LLD were attributable to TV, most of which were from high TVs. TV caused more LLD in the young, cerebrovascular disease, and southern China. The mortality burdens were modified by county level characteristics.
C1 [Gong, Weiwei] Zhejiang Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Hangzhou 310051, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Xing; Hu, Jianxiong; Xiao, Jianpeng; Zeng, Weilin; He, Guanhao] Guangdong Prov Inst Publ Hlth, Guangdong Prov Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Guangzhou 511430, Peoples R China.
   [Zhou, Maigeng] Natl Ctr Chron & Noncommunicable Dis Control & Pr, Beijing 100050, Peoples R China.
   [Zhou, Chunliang] Hunan Prov Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Dept Environm & Hlth, Changsha 450001, Peoples R China.
   [Xiao, Yize] Yunnan Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Kunming 650022, Yunnan, Peoples R China.
   [Huang, Biao] Jilin Prov Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Changchun 130062, Peoples R China.
   [Lin, Lifeng] Guangdong Prov Ctr Dis Control & Prevent, Guangzhou 511430, Peoples R China.
   [Huang, Cunrui] Sun Yat Sen Univ, Sch Publ Hlth, Guangzhou 510080, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Tao; Ma, Wenjun] Jinan Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth & Prevent Med, Guangzhou 510632, Peoples R China.
   [Liu, Tao; Ma, Wenjun] Jinan Univ, Dis Control & Prevent Inst, Guangzhou 510632, Peoples R China.
   [Du, Qingfeng] Southern Med Univ, Affiliated Hosp 7, Gen Practice Ctr, Foshan 528200, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Center for Disease Control & Prevention; Guangdong Provincial
   Center for Disease Control & Prevention; Chinese Center for Disease
   Control & Prevention; National Center for Chronic & Noncommunicable
   Disease Control & Prevention, Chinese Center for Disease Control &
   Prevention; Chinese Center for Disease Control & Prevention; Guangdong
   Provincial Center for Disease Control & Prevention; Sun Yat Sen
   University; Jinan University; Jinan University; Southern Medical
   University - China
RP Liu, T (corresponding author), Jinan Univ, Sch Med, Dept Publ Hlth & Prevent Med, Guangzhou 510632, Peoples R China.; Liu, T (corresponding author), Jinan Univ, Dis Control & Prevent Inst, Guangzhou 510632, Peoples R China.; Du, QF (corresponding author), Southern Med Univ, Affiliated Hosp 7, Gen Practice Ctr, Foshan 528200, Peoples R China.
EM gztt_2002@163.com; dqf@vip.163.com
RI Huang, Cunrui/ABI-3312-2020; Du, Qing/HKN-6976-2023; Xiao,
   Jianpeng/GRY-5231-2022; 马, 文军/GQQ-7852-2022; Liu, Tao/LVS-2751-2024;
   wang, jiahui/IXD-1197-2023; Zhou, Maigeng/HCH-7703-2022
OI Hu, Jianxiong/0000-0003-4180-3187
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFA0606200];
   National Natural Science Foundation of China [42075173, 42175181];
   Medical Scientific Research Foundation of Guangdong Province [A2020051];
   Guangdong Health Innovation Platform; Foshan Key Technology Project
   [2020001000376]; Foshan Science and Technology Innovation Project
   [2020001005585]
FX This work was supported by the National Key Research and Development
   Program of China (2018YFA0606200), National Natural Science Foundation
   of China (42075173, 42175181), Medical Scientific Research Foundation of
   Guangdong Province (A2020051), the Guangdong Health Innovation Platform,
   the Foshan Key Technology Project for COVID-19 (2020001000376), and
   Foshan Science and Technology Innovation Project (2020001005585).
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NR 46
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 4
U2 34
PU SPRINGERNATURE
PI LONDON
PA CAMPUS, 4 CRINAN ST, LONDON, N1 9XW, ENGLAND
SN 1559-0631
EI 1559-064X
J9 J EXPO SCI ENV EPID
JI J. Expo. Sci. Environ. Epidemiol.
PD JAN
PY 2023
VL 33
IS 1
BP 118
EP 124
DI 10.1038/s41370-022-00424-x
EA MAR 2022
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health;
   Toxicology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Toxicology
GA 8P6OJ
UT WOS:000778019800001
PM 35332279
OA Bronze, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mishra, G
   Sarkar, A
   Giri, K
   Nath, AJ
   Lal, R
   Francaviglia, R
AF Mishra, Gaurav
   Sarkar, Avishek
   Giri, Krishna
   Nath, Arun Jyoti
   Lal, Rattan
   Francaviglia, Rosa
TI Changes in soil carbon stocks under plantation systems and natural
   forests in Northeast India
SO ECOLOGICAL MODELLING
LA English
DT Article
DE Soil organic carbon; Tropical plantations; Forest conversion;
   Chronosequence; RothC
ID LAND-USE CHANGE; ORGANIC-CARBON; CLIMATE-CHANGE; COVER CHANGE;
   SEQUESTRATION; MATTER; CONVERSION; REGION; POOL; CULTIVATION
AB Understanding the impact of land use conversion from forests to plantations on soil organic carbon (SOC) stocks is critical for sustainable land and forest management in Northeast India (NEI). The present study was conducted in West Garo hills district of Meghalaya state in NEI, to evaluate the impact of plantations (rubber, tea, areca nut, cashew nut and pineapple) on SOC stocks in comparison with a natural forest. Soil samples were collected from plantations of different age classes (0-5, 5-10, 10-15, 15-20, 20-25, 25-30, and 30-40 years old) to assess their potential for C storage. RothC model was run at equilibrium on forest land-use, and thereafter was calibrated and validated to model SOC stocks in the plantations over the 40 years chrono-sequence using the baseline average climate data. Results showed that with increase in age of plantations (at 40 years), SOC stocks decreased to 57.4, 50.3 and 44.4 Mg C ha (-1) in rubber, areca nut and pineapple plantations at the average rate of 0.41, 0.58 and 0.73 Mg C ha (-1) yr (-1), respectively. This corresponded to a SOC stock loss of about 22, 32 and 40% compared to the initial SOC stock under forest (73.6 Mg C ha (-1)). Conversely, SOC stocks in tea and cashew nut plantations increased to 83.4 and 75.4 Mg C ha (-1) (at the average rate of 0.24 and 0.05 Mg C ha (-1) yr (-1)), corresponding to a SOC gain of about 13 and 2.5% compared to that under forest over 40 years. The data on abrupt climate change (ACC) scenario by RothC simulations showed that rubber, areca nut, pineapple and forest land uses would lose carbon at the rate of 0.65, 0.65, 1.42 and 0.13 Mg C ha (-1) yr (-1), respectively. Conversely, tea and cashew nut plantations might gain C at the rate of 0.35 and 0.23 Mg C ha (-1) yr (-1), respectively, representing a valuableoption for storing C and mitigating and adapting to climate change. Further, protecting and restoring natural forests and/or mixed stands of native tree species might reduce the risks of the loss of biodiversity and be a viable option for sustainable land management in NEI.
C1 [Mishra, Gaurav; Sarkar, Avishek; Giri, Krishna] Rain Forest Res Inst, Div Silviculture & Forest Management, Jorhat 785001, Assam, India.
   [Nath, Arun Jyoti] Assam Univ, Dept Ecol & Environm Sci, Silchar 788011, Assam, India.
   [Lal, Rattan] Ohio State Univ, Carbon Management & Sequestrat Ctr, Columbus, OH 43210 USA.
   [Francaviglia, Rosa] Council Agr Res & Econ, CREA, Res Ctr Agr & Environm, I-00184 Rome, Italy.
C3 Indian Council of Forestry Research & Education (ICFRE); Rain Forest
   Research Institute (RFRI); Assam University; University System of Ohio;
   Ohio State University; Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e
   L'analisi Dell'economia Agraria (CREA)
RP Mishra, G (corresponding author), Rain Forest Res Inst, Div Silviculture & Forest Management, Jorhat 785001, Assam, India.
EM gaurav.mishra215@gmail.com
RI Giri, Krishna/I-7190-2019; Francaviglia, Rosa/J-7466-2012; mishra,
   gaurav/AAX-9953-2020
OI mishra, gaurav/0000-0001-5687-029X
FU Indian Council of Forestry Research and Education (ICFRE), Dehradun
   [RFRI/2018-19/SFM-1]; Forests & Environment Department, Government of
   Meghalaya
FX We thankfully acknowledge the financial support provided by Indian
   Council of Forestry Research and Education (ICFRE), Dehradun, for
   supporting this research work through project RFRI/2018-19/SFM-1. We
   would also like to thank the Forests & Environment Department,
   Government of Meghalaya, for their help and support during the sample
   collection and survey works.
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NR 77
TC 16
Z9 16
U1 7
U2 41
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0304-3800
EI 1872-7026
J9 ECOL MODEL
JI Ecol. Model.
PD APR 15
PY 2021
VL 446
AR 109500
DI 10.1016/j.ecolmodel.2021.109500
EA MAR 2021
PG 12
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA RC8GC
UT WOS:000633031400003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wu, SH
   Liu, LL
   Gao, JB
   Wang, WT
AF Wu, Shaohong
   Liu, Lulu
   Gao, Jiangbo
   Wang, Wentao
TI Integrate Risk From Climate Change in China Under Global Warming of 1.5
   and 2.0 °C.
SO EARTHS FUTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE global warming; climate change; integrate risk; extreme events;
   vulnerability
ID AGRICULTURAL DROUGHT RISK; TEMPERATURE; PRECIPITATION; IMPACTS; CMIP5
AB Risk of climate-related impacts results from the interaction of climate-related hazards (including hazardous events and trends) with the vulnerability and exposure of human and natural systems. Despite the commitment of the Paris Agreement, the integrate research on climate change risk combining risk-causing factors and risk-bearing bodies, the regional differences in climate impacts are still missing. In this paper we provide a quantitative assessment of hazards and socioeconomic risks of extreme events, risks of risk-bearing bodies in China under global warming of 1.5 and 2.0 degrees C based on future climate scenarios, and quantitative evaluation theory for climate change risk. For severe heat waves, hazards might significantly intensify. Affected population under 2.0 degrees C warming might increase by more than 60% compared to that of 1.5 degrees C. Hazards of severe droughts and floods might strengthen under Representative Concentration Pathway 8.5 scenario. Economic losses might double between warming levels of 1.5 and 2.0 degrees C, and the population affected by severe floods might continuously increase. Under the integrate effects of multiple disasters, the regions with high population and economic risks would be concentrated in eastern China. The scope would gradually expand to the west with socioeconomic development and intensification of extreme events. High ecological risks might be concentrated in the southern regions of the Yangtze River Basin, while the ecological risk in northern China would expand. High agriculture yield risks might be distributed mainly in south of the North China Plain, the Sichuan Basin, south of the Yangtze River, and west of Northwest China, and the risk levels might continuously increase.
   Plain Language Summary. Based on the climate and socioeconomic scenario data from the Inter-Sectoral Impact Model Inter-comparison Project and International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis, risks from climate change were identified under different warming levels, considering socioeconomic damage and ecosystem and food production losses. The relatively developed areas of eastern China exhibit high risks, and the risks show a westward and northward expansion trend. Socioeconomic damage, natural ecosystem, and food production losses would increase with socioeconomic development and intensification of global warming. We believe that a quantitative assessment of climate change risk should integrate climate-related hazards with the vulnerability and exposure of human and natural systems. These results can provide decision-making support for governments and a database for adapting to climate change.
C1 [Wu, Shaohong; Liu, Lulu; Gao, Jiangbo] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Wu, Shaohong] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Resources & Environm, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Wentao] Minist Sci & Technol, Adm Ctr Chinas Agenda 21, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of
   Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS
RP Wu, SH; Gao, JB (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Land Surface Pattern & Simulat, Beijing, Peoples R China.; Wu, SH (corresponding author), Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Resources & Environm, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM wush@igsnrr.ac.cn; gaojiangbo@igsnrr.ac.cn
RI Liu, Lulu/AAV-3376-2020; wang, wentao/V-5375-2019
FU National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC1508801,
   2018YFC1509002]; Key Program of National Natural Science Foundation of
   China [41530749, 41671098]; Strategic Priority Research Program of the
   Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDA19040304]
FX This research was financially supported by the National Key Research and
   Development Program of China (Grant 2018YFC1509002), the Key Program of
   National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant 41530749 and
   41671098), the National Key Research and Development Program of China
   (Grant. 2018YFC1508801), and the Strategic Priority Research Program of
   the Chinese Academy of Sciences (Grant XDA19040304). Climate scenario
   data were collected and available at the Earth System Grid Federation
   data node at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
   (https://esgf-node.llnl.gov/search/esgf-llnl/).Socioeconomic scenario
   data were retrieved from the Center for Global Environmental Research,
   National Institute for Environmental Studies
   (http://www.cger.nies.go.jp/gcp/population-and-gdp.html).Global mean
   surface temperature data were obtained from the Met Office Hadley Centre
   and the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia
   (http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/).Mean surface temperature of China data from
   Tang et al. (2009) were available and cited in the text. Land use data
   are available from the Resources and Environmental Sciences Data Center
   of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (http://www.resdc.cn/data.aspx?
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   National Commission for Disaster Reduction
   (http://www.ndrcc.org.cn/zqtj/index.jhtml).The authors acknowledge all
   the groups for producing and sharing their data set.
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NR 66
TC 36
Z9 40
U1 10
U2 155
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
EI 2328-4277
J9 EARTHS FUTURE
JI Earth Future
PD DEC
PY 2019
VL 7
IS 12
BP 1307
EP 1322
DI 10.1029/2019EF001194
EA DEC 2019
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA KF1RX
UT WOS:000501686300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wallace, DC
   Ruiz-Pesini, E
   Mishmar, D
AF Wallace, DC
   Ruiz-Pesini, E
   Mishmar, D
TI mtDNA variation, climatic adaptation, degenerative diseases, and
   longevity
SO COLD SPRING HARBOR SYMPOSIA ON QUANTITATIVE BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT 67th Cold Spring Harbor Symposium on Quantitative Biology
CY 2003
CL Cold Spring Harbor, NY
SP Natl Human Genome Res Inst, Natl Inst Hlth, Natl Canc Inst, US DOE, Amgen Inc, Aventis Pharma AG, Bristol-Myers Squibb Co, Eli Lilly & Co, GlaxoSmithKline, Novartis Pharma AG, Pfizer Inc, Appl Biosyst, AstraZeneca, Bio Ventures Inc, Cogene BioTech Ventures Lt, Diagnost Products Corp, Forest Lab Inc, Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceuit Res & Dev L L C, Kyowa Hakko Kogyo Co Ltd, Lexicon Genet Inc, Merck Res Lab, New England BioLabs Inc, OSI Pharmaceut Inc, Pall Corp, Schering-Plough Res Inst, Wyeth Genet Inst
ID MITOCHONDRIAL-DNA; NORTH-AMERICA; HAPLOGROUP-X; POPULATION; EVOLUTION;
   VARIANTS; LHON
C1 Univ Calif Irvine, Ctr Mol & Mitochondrial Med & Genet, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Irvine
RP Wallace, DC (corresponding author), Univ Calif Irvine, Ctr Mol & Mitochondrial Med & Genet, Irvine, CA 92697 USA.
RI Mishmar, Dan/AAJ-6109-2020
OI Mishmar, Dan/0000-0003-3488-8792
FU NIA NIH HHS [AG-13154] Funding Source: Medline; NINDS NIH HHS [NS-21328]
   Funding Source: Medline
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NR 31
TC 84
Z9 93
U1 0
U2 16
PU COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
PI WOODBURY
PA 500 SUNNYSIDE BLVD, WOODBURY, NY 11797-2924 USA
SN 0091-7451
J9 COLD SPRING HARB SYM
JI Cold Spring Harbor Symp. Quant. Biol.
PY 2003
VL 68
BP 479
EP 486
PG 8
WC Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Biology
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biochemistry & Molecular Biology; Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other
   Topics
GA 841YT
UT WOS:000222969300056
PM 15338651
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Allarané, N
   Atchadé, AJ
   N'Dilbe, TR
   Azagoun, VVA
   Hetcheli, F
AF Allarane, Ndonaye
   Atchade, Assouhan Jonas
   N'Dilbe, Tob-Ro
   Azagoun, Vidjinnagni Vinasse Ametooyona
   Hetcheli, Follygan
TI Integrating Climate Change Adaptation Strategies into Urban Policies for
   Sustainable City Resilience: Barriers and Solutions in the Central
   African City of N'Djaména
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE integrating urban adaptation; climate policy; urban governance;
   involvement of urban players
ID GOVERNANCE; INNOVATION; POLITICS
AB Climate change has become a serious threat to human life. This study aims to reveal the face of climate policies and the integration of urban adaptation into urban planning policies in the city of N'Djam & eacute;na. To achieve this, we adopted a methodology combining both quantitative and qualitative approaches. Surveys of key informants were used to gather information on how to achieve the objectives set. The results show that key informants believe that climate policies have not met the expectations of the city's citizens in terms of effectiveness and positive impacts. These players assume that urban policy planning does not take urban adaptation into account. The four categories of barriers hindering the integration of urban adaptation and its implementation relate to a lack of information and knowledge, political ill will, and organization and constraints linked to the mobilization and availability of resources. This study suggests the sharing of information, knowledge, and communication involving all stakeholders in N'Djam & eacute;na's urban development, the organization of the city's state and municipal structures, the involvement and support of political authorities, greater access to financing, and the establishment of professional networks of expertise as catalysts for success.
C1 [Allarane, Ndonaye; Atchade, Assouhan Jonas; Azagoun, Vidjinnagni Vinasse Ametooyona] Reg Ctr Excellence Sustainable Cities Africa CERVi, BP 1515, Lome, Togo.
   [Allarane, Ndonaye; Hetcheli, Follygan] Univ Lome, Res Lab Spaces Exchanges & Human Secur LaREESH, BP 1515, Lome, Togo.
   [Atchade, Assouhan Jonas] African Res & Impact Network ARIN, POB 53358, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [N'Dilbe, Tob-Ro] Univ Adam Barka, Geog Dept, Abeche 1173, Chad.
C3 University of Lome
RP Allarané, N (corresponding author), Reg Ctr Excellence Sustainable Cities Africa CERVi, BP 1515, Lome, Togo.; Allarané, N (corresponding author), Univ Lome, Res Lab Spaces Exchanges & Human Secur LaREESH, BP 1515, Lome, Togo.
EM ndonayefils2000@gmail.com
OI Allarane, Ndonaye/0009-0004-3010-1643; AZAGOUN, VIDJINNAGNI VINASSE
   AMETOOYONA/0009-0000-9463-8838
FU Regional Center of Excellence on Sustainable Cities in Africa
   (CERViDA-DOUNEDON); Association of African Universities (AUA); World
   Bank;  [IDA 5360 TG]
FX This research was funded by the Regional Center of Excellence on
   Sustainable Cities in Africa (CERViDA-DOUNEDON), the Association of
   African Universities (AUA), and the World Bank. This research is funded
   under number IDA 5360 TG.
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NR 47
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 5
U2 5
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 13
AR 5309
DI 10.3390/su16135309
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YP2I8
UT WOS:001269619900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Baba, M
   Kurian, NP
   Oswin, S
AF Baba, M.
   Kurian, N. P.
   Oswin, S.
TI Climate resilient coastal protection: A case study of dune nourishment
   and vegetation at Bhatye, Ratnagiri, Maharashtra
SO INDIAN JOURNAL OF GEO-MARINE SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Dune nourishment; Nature-based coastal protection;
   Sand-based coastal solutions]
AB Beaches and dunes are some of the natural mechanisms provided by nature for the protection of the coasts. Re-nourishing the eroded beaches and dunes is widely accepted as a low-cost, nature-friendly coastal protection measure. Such projects are just being initiated for the Indian coastline. A pilot dune nourishment demonstration project, following Climate Change Adaptation Guidelines for India, was attempted at Bhatye in the Ratnagiri district of Maharashtra, India. The pilot project involved the nourishment of a 500 m long eroded dune designed following the Minimum Beach Level (MBL) concept, planting of the dune with native vegetation by involving the coastal community and fencing of the dune for its protection. The dune crest height was 5.5 m above Chart Datum (CD) with slopes of 1:5 on both sides. The sand required for the nourishment was borrowed from a shoal, which was a hindrance to safe navigation to the fishing harbour at the neighbouring river entrance. The restored dune has survived five monsoons and several cyclones since its completion in January 2019. The pilot project has successfully demonstrated that low-cost dune nourishment is a feasible option to prevent flooding of low-lying coastal areas and step up the post-storm dune recovery where aeolian sediment transport is slow.
C1 [Baba, M.] Ctr Earth Sci Studies retd, Barkath, Breeze Enclave, Thiruvananthapuram 695011, Kerala, India.
   [Kurian, N. P.] Natl Ctr Earth Sci Studies retd, 8D Veegaland Kingstown Apt, Tripunithura 682301, Kerala, India.
   [Oswin, S.] 10C Dhanalaxmi Apartment,Subhanpura, Vadodara 390023, Gujarat, India.
RP Kurian, NP (corresponding author), Natl Ctr Earth Sci Studies retd, 8D Veegaland Kingstown Apt, Tripunithura 682301, Kerala, India.
EM npkurian@gmail.com
FU Global Environment Facility (GEF) through ADB
FX The Bhatye dune restoration project was part of the 'Climate Resilient
   Coastal Protection and Management Project (CRCPMP) ' funded by the
   Global Environment Facility (GEF) through ADB as a Technical Assistance
   (TA) . The Central Water Commission (CWC) under the Ministry of Water
   Resources, River Development and Ganga Rejuvenation (MoWR, RD & GR) ,
   Government of India, was the focal executing agency. Maharashtra
   Maritime Board (MMB) functioned as the local implementing agency for the
   Bhatye dune development. A team of consultants engaged by FCG ANZDEC
   Ltd, New Zealand, provided consultancy for the project. The authors
   thank Dr. Kerry Black for the leadership in formulating the guidelines,
   Dr. Joseph Mathew for the guidance and other consulting team members,
   particularly Dr. Sasikala Sitaram, Mr. Narayan Bhatt, and Mr. PRM
   Sharma, for all the support extended. Thanks are due to the anonymous
   reviewer for critical comments.
CR ADB, 2021, ADB Completion Report, Project Number 40156-023., P72
   [Anonymous], 2001, Coastal dune management: a manual of coastal dune management and rehabilitation techniques, P96
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NR 37
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU NATL INST SCIENCE COMMUNICATION-NISCAIR
PI NEW DELHI
PA DR K S KRISHNAN MARG, PUSA CAMPUS, NEW DELHI 110 012, INDIA
EI 2582-6727
J9 INDIAN J GEO-MAR SCI
JI Indian J. Geo-Mar. Sci.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 52
IS 12
BP 571
EP 583
DI 10.56042/ijms.v52i12.5000
PG 13
WC Oceanography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Oceanography
GA G2T8H
UT WOS:001315225800003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kiptum, A
   Mwangi, E
   Otieno, G
   Njogu, A
   Kilavi, M
   Mwai, Z
   MacLeod, D
   Neal, J
   Hawker, L
   O'Shea, T
   Saado, H
   Visman, E
   Majani, B
   Todd, MC
AF Kiptum, Augustine
   Mwangi, Emmah
   Otieno, George
   Njogu, Andrew
   Kilavi, Mary
   Mwai, Zacharia
   MacLeod, Dave
   Neal, Jeff
   Hawker, Laurence
   O'Shea, Tom
   Saado, Halima
   Visman, Emma
   Majani, Bernard
   Todd, Martin C.
TI Advancing operational flood forecasting, early warning and risk
   management with new emerging science: Gaps, opportunities and barriers
   in Kenya
SO JOURNAL OF FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE early warning; flood; forecast-based action; forecasting; impact based
   forecasting; inundation; Kenya
ID HEAVY RAINFALL; AFRICA; HAZARD; SYSTEMS; GLOFAS
AB Kenya and the wider East African region suffer from significant flood risk, as illustrated by major losses of lives, livelihoods and assets in the most recent years. This is likely to increase in future as exposure rises and rainfall intensifies under climate change. Accordingly, flood risk management is a priority action area in Kenya's national climate change adaptation planning. Here, we outline the opportunities and challenges to improve end-to-end flood early warning systems, considering the scientific, technical and institutional/governance dimensions. We demonstrate improvements in rainfall forecasts, river flow, inundation and baseline flood risk information. Notably, East Africa is a 'sweetspot' for rainfall predictability at sub-seasonal to seasonal timescales for extending forecast lead times beyond a few days and for ensemble flood forecasting. Further, we demonstrate coupled ensemble flow forecasting, new flood inundation simulation, vulnerability and exposure data to support Impact based Forecasting (IbF). We illustrate these advances in the case of fluvial and urban flooding and reflect on the potential for improved flood preparedness action. However, we note that, unlike for drought, there remains no national flood risk management framework in Kenya and there is need to enhance institutional capacities and arrangements to take full advantage of these scientific advances.
C1 [Kiptum, Augustine; Mwangi, Emmah; Todd, Martin C.] Univ Sussex, Dept Geog, Sussex, England.
   [Kiptum, Augustine; Njogu, Andrew; Kilavi, Mary; Mwai, Zacharia] Kenya Meteorol Dept, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Otieno, George] Water Resources Author, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Otieno, George; MacLeod, Dave; Neal, Jeff; Hawker, Laurence; O'Shea, Tom] Univ Bristol, Bristol, England.
   [Saado, Halima] Kenya Red Cross Soc, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Visman, Emma; Majani, Bernard] Kings Coll London, London, England.
   [Visman, Emma] UK Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Bailrigg, England.
C3 University of Sussex; University of Bristol; University of London;
   King's College London; UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH)
RP Kiptum, A (corresponding author), Univ Sussex, Dept Geog, Sussex, England.
EM ak720@sussex.ac.uk
RI ; Neal, Jeffrey/C-8723-2009
OI O'Shea, Thomas/0000-0003-0484-2005; Neal, Jeffrey/0000-0001-5793-9594;
   Hawker, Laurence/0000-0002-8317-7084; Kiptum, Augustine
   Kiplagat/0000-0003-3117-9368; Majani, Bernard/0000-0001-6020-2972
FU Natural Environment Research Council [NE/R007799/1]; NERC [NE/P000673/1,
   NE/M020398/1, NE/S006079/1, NE/R014272/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX Natural Environment Research Council,Grant/Award Number: NE/R007799/1
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NR 86
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 3
U2 17
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1753-318X
J9 J FLOOD RISK MANAG
JI J. Flood Risk Manag.
PD 2023 MAR 29
PY 2023
DI 10.1111/jfr3.12884
EA MAR 2023
PG 26
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA C2JK2
UT WOS:000960239500001
OA gold, Green Accepted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Creach, A
   Bastidas-Arteaga, E
   Pardo, S
   Mercier, D
AF Creach, Axel
   Bastidas-Arteaga, Emilio
   Pardo, Sophie
   Mercier, Denis
TI Method to Identify the Likelihood of Death in Residential Buildings
   during Coastal Flooding
SO BUILDINGS
LA English
DT Article
DE coastal flooding risk; loss of life; fatality assessment; residential
   buildings; climate change adaptation; VIE index
ID STORM XYNTHIA; TSUNAMI; VULNERABILITY; LIFE; FATALITIES; DAMAGE; MODEL;
   LESSONS; IMPACT; ACEH
AB Tools exist to predict fatalities related to floods, but current models do not focus on fatalities in buildings. For example, Storm Xynthia in France in 2010 resulted in 41 drowning deaths inside buildings. Therefore, there has been increasing recognition of the risk of people becoming trapped in buildings during floods. To identify buildings which could expose their occupants to a risk of death in the case of flooding, we propose the use of the extreme vulnerability index (VIE index), which identifies which buildings are at greatest risk of trapping people during floods. In addition, the "mortality function method" is used to further estimate the expected number of fatalities based on (1) groups of vulnerable people (e.g., aged or disabled), (2) the location of buildings in relation to major watercourses, and (3) the configuration of buildings (e.g., single or multiple entries and single or multiple stories). The overall framework is derived from case studies from Storm Xynthia which give a deterministic approach for deaths inside buildings for coastal floods, which is suited for low-lying areas protected by walls or sandy barriers. This methodology provides a tool which could help make decisions for adaptation strategy implementation to preserve human life.
C1 [Creach, Axel; Mercier, Denis] Sorbonne Univ, Geog & Planning Dept, Lab Phys Geog Actual & Quaternary Environm, 191 Rue St Jacques, F-75005 Paris, France.
   [Bastidas-Arteaga, Emilio] La Rochelle Univ, CNRS, Lab Engn Sci Environm, LaSIE,UMR 7356, Ave Michel Crepeau, F-17042 La Rochelle 1, France.
   [Pardo, Sophie] LEMNA Nantes Univ, Lab Econ & Management Nantes, Chemin Cens Tertre Batiment Erdre, F-44322 Nantes, France.
C3 Sorbonne Universite; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
   (CNRS); Nantes Universite
RP Creach, A (corresponding author), Sorbonne Univ, Geog & Planning Dept, Lab Phys Geog Actual & Quaternary Environm, 191 Rue St Jacques, F-75005 Paris, France.
EM axel.creach@sorbonne-universite.fr; ebastida@univ-lr.fr;
   sophie.pardo@univ-nantes.fr; denis.mercier@sorbonne-universite.fr
RI Pardo, Sophie/AHA-6091-2022; Bastidas-Arteaga, Emilio/A-6090-2012
OI Pardo, Sophie/0000-0002-9839-4946; Creach, Axel/0000-0002-6444-735X;
   Mercier, Denis/0000-0003-2325-1390; Bastidas-Arteaga,
   Emilio/0000-0002-7370-5218
FU COSELMAR research program - Regional Council of Pays de la Loire
FX This research was supported by the COSELMAR research program, funded by
   the Regional Council of Pays de la Loire (20122017): www.coselmar.fr
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NR 66
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 5
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2075-5309
J9 BUILDINGS-BASEL
JI BUILDINGS-BASEL
PD FEB
PY 2022
VL 12
IS 2
AR 125
DI 10.3390/buildings12020125
PG 26
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA ZL5YP
UT WOS:000763752900001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tesselaar, M
   Botzen, WJW
   Robinson, PJ
   Aerts, JCJH
   Zhou, FJ
AF Tesselaar, Max
   Botzen, W. J. Wouter
   Robinson, Peter J.
   Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.
   Zhou, Fujin
TI Charity hazard and the flood insurance protection gap: An EU scale
   assessment under climate change
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Flood risk; Flood insurance; Charity hazard; Insurance protection gap;
   Partial equilibrium modelling; Climate change adaptation
ID RISK; ASSISTANCE; PERCEPTIONS; PREFERENCES; DATABASE; UTILITY; DEMAND;
   FUTURE
AB The flood insurance protection gap, the level of uninsured flood risk, is a problem faced by many European countries and is expected to increase due to climate change. In some countries a cause of low demand for flood insurance is the crowding out of private insurance uptake due to the anticipation of government compensation for uninsured damage, a phenomenon known as charity hazard. This study applies a partial equilibrium model of flood insurance markets to explore the extent of charity hazard and the insurance protection gap for EU-countries until 2050. For this analysis, we apply an expected utility framework with insurance purchase decision functions that capture the probability, ambiguity and extent of government compensation. By accounting for country-level insurance systems and government compensation types, as well as regional flood risk, we aim to assess how charity hazard develops under different conditions. The extent of charity hazard decreases with uncertainty of government compensation, as well as with higher flood risk. Considering current and future conditions, the highest impact of charity hazard is observed in regions of Germany and Italy. The projected insurance protection gap is highest in Germany, followed by Spain, Poland and Italy, and is expected to grow towards 2050.
C1 [Tesselaar, Max; Botzen, W. J. Wouter; Robinson, Peter J.; Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.; Zhou, Fujin] Vrije Univ, Inst Environm Studies, De Boelelaan 1087, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, W. J. Wouter] Univ Utrecht, Sch Econ, Kriekenpitpl 21-22, NL-3584 EC Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Botzen, W. J. Wouter] Univ Penn, Risk Management & Decis Proc Ctr, Wharton Sch, 3819 Chestnut St, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA.
   [Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.] Deltares, Boussinesqweg 1, NL-2629 HV Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Utrecht University; University of
   Pennsylvania; Deltares
RP Tesselaar, M (corresponding author), Vrije Univ, Inst Environm Studies, De Boelelaan 1087, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM max.tesselaar@vu.nl
RI Aerts, Jeroen/M-8431-2013; Botzen, Wouter/L-3123-2013
OI Tesselaar, Max/0000-0001-6278-382X; ZHOU, FUJIN/0000-0001-6043-5805;
   Botzen, Wouter/0000-0002-8563-4963; Robinson, Peter/0000-0003-2833-8030
FU Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) [453.14.006,
   452.14.005]
FX The research leading to this article received funding from the
   Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) : VICI grant No.
   453.14.006 & VIDI grant No. 452.14.005. The authors would like to thank
   Timothy Tiggeloven for providing relevant flood hazard and exposure
   data, and Paul Hudson for support regarding the adaptation of the DIFI
   model.
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NR 76
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 3
U2 22
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-8009
EI 1873-6106
J9 ECOL ECON
JI Ecol. Econ.
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 193
AR 107289
DI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2021.107289
EA NOV 2021
PG 23
WC Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA XM3SK
UT WOS:000728751200009
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Stoll, NL
   Westbrook, CJ
AF Stoll, Nichole-Lynn
   Westbrook, Cherie J.
TI Beaver dam capacity of Canada's boreal plain in response to
   environmental change
SO SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
ID CASTOR-CANADENSIS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; NATIONAL-PARK; HABITAT; DISTURBANCE;
   WETLANDS; STREAMS; WATER; ABUNDANCE; DYNAMICS
AB Environmental changes are altering the water cycle of Canada's boreal plain. Beaver dams are well known for increasing water storage and slowing flow through stream networks. For these reasons beavers are increasingly being included in climate change adaptation strategies. But, little work focuses on how environmental changes will affect dam building capacity along stream networks. Here we estimate the capacity of the stream network in Riding Mountain National Park, Manitoba, Canada to support beaver dams under changing environmental conditions using a modelling approach. We show that at capacity, the park's stream network can support 24,690 beaver dams and hold between 8.2 and 12.8 million m(3) of water in beaver ponds. Between 1991 and 2016 the park's vegetation composition shifted to less preferred beaver forage, which led to a 13% decrease in maximum dam capacity. We also found that dam capacity is sensitive to the size of regularly-occurring floods-doubling the 2-year flood reduces the park's dam capacity by 21%. The results show that the potential for beaver to offset some expected climatic-induced changes to the boreal water cycle is more complex than previously thought, as there is a feedback wherein dam capacity can be reduced by changing environmental conditions.
C1 [Stoll, Nichole-Lynn; Westbrook, Cherie J.] Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Geog & Planning, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5C8, Canada.
C3 University of Saskatchewan
RP Westbrook, CJ (corresponding author), Univ Saskatchewan, Dept Geog & Planning, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5C8, Canada.
EM cherie.westbrook@usask.ca
RI Stoll, Nichole-Lynn/KIC-9660-2024
FU Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
   [RGPIN-2017-05873, 463960-2015]
FX We thank Cody Misfeldt and Kirby England for field assistance, Thuan Ha
   for assistance with the vegetation cover change analysis, and the
   natural resource management staff at Riding Mountain National Park for
   logistical support. We are grateful to Joe Wheaton who hosted NS for a
   semester exchange in his research group at Utah State University so she
   could learn the BRAT model. Funding was provided by Grants from the
   Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
   Discovery (RGPIN-2017-05873) and CREATE (463960-2015) programs. This
   research was carried out under park permit number RMNP-2017-25378.
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NR 68
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 26
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2045-2322
J9 SCI REP-UK
JI Sci Rep
PD OCT 8
PY 2020
VL 10
IS 1
AR 16800
DI 10.1038/s41598-020-73095-z
PG 12
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA OA0GJ
UT WOS:000577475100024
PM 33033269
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carman, JP
   Zint, MT
AF Carman, Jennifer P.
   Zint, Michaela T.
TI Defining and classifying personal and household climate change
   adaptation behaviors
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Behavior; Systematic review;
   Interdisciplinary; Personal and household actions
ID PRO-ENVIRONMENTAL BEHAVIOR; HEALTH BELIEF MODEL; PROTECTION MOTIVATION;
   PUBLIC SUPPORT; FEAR APPEALS; RESILIENCE; STRATEGIES; VULNERABILITY;
   PERCEPTIONS; ENGAGEMENT
AB With climate change increasingly affecting individuals' day-to-day lives, interest is growing in the personal and household adaptation behaviors that people can engage in. Many of these behaviors focus on actions to protect oneself or one's household in response to immediate hazards rather than ones that may achieve longer-term adaptation goals. We conducted a content analysis of 75 publications identified through a systematic literature review to learn how researchers from a range of disciplines conceptualize adaptive behavior in the context of climate change and what kinds of specific actions they describe. Based on this review, we propose a comprehensive definition of personal and household adaptation behavior that considers its purpose (i.e., preventing harm or gaining benefits), timing (i.e., proactive or reactive), time scale (i.e., short-term or long-term), as well as who acts (i.e., the individual alone or with others) and who is affected by those actions (i.e., the individual, other people, or the environment). We classify specific individual adaptation behaviors into civic engagement, consumption, coping, household protection, learning, lifestyle changes, migration, and self-protection. Research is needed to better understand the personal and societal benefits of adaptation behaviors and how to more equitably support these actions in different contexts.
C1 [Carman, Jennifer P.; Zint, Michaela T.] Univ Michigan, Sch Sustainabil & Environm, 440 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Zint, Michaela T.] Univ Michigan, Coll Literature Sci & Arts, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
   [Zint, Michaela T.] Univ Michigan, Sch Educ, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
C3 University of Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of
   Michigan System; University of Michigan; University of Michigan System;
   University of Michigan
RP Carman, JP (corresponding author), Univ Michigan, Sch Sustainabil & Environm, 440 Church St, Ann Arbor, MI 48109 USA.
EM jpcarman@umich.edu
RI Carman, Jennifer/JXN-8576-2024
OI Carman, Jennifer/0000-0002-9580-8322
FU Dow Chemical Company Foundation; University of Michigan, through the Dow
   Sustainability Fellows Program at the University of Michigan
FX The authors would like to thank Rosina Bierbaum, Victoria
   Campbell-Arvai, Thomas Logan, Richard Norton, Kaitlin Toner Raimi, and
   Timothy Williams for their valuable insights. This work was supported in
   part by The Dow Chemical Company Foundation and the University of
   Michigan, through the Dow Sustainability Fellows Program at the
   University of Michigan. The sponsor played no role in developing,
   writing, or publishing this article.
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NR 99
TC 48
Z9 59
U1 11
U2 67
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 61
AR 102062
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2020.102062
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA LF3DA
UT WOS:000527300300017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kasvi, E
   Lotsari, E
   Kumpumäki, M
   Dubrovin, T
   Veijalainen, N
AF Kasvi, Elina
   Lotsari, Eliisa
   Kumpumaki, Miia
   Dubrovin, Tanja
   Veijalainen, Noora
TI Effects of Climate Change and Flow Regulation on the Flow
   Characteristics of a Low-Relief River within Southern Boreal Climate
   Area
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; stream erosion; flood risk; hydraulic modeling;
   regulated rivers
ID CHANGE IMPACTS; SEA-LEVEL; CHANGE PROJECTIONS; HYDROPOWER; MODELS;
   UNCERTAINTY; MANAGEMENT; HYDROLOGY; SCENARIOS; FINLAND
AB We investigated how hydro-climatological changes would affect fluvial forces and inundated area during a typical high-flow situation (MHQ, mean high discharge), and how adaptive regulation could attenuate the climate change impacts in a low-relief river of the Southern Boreal climate area. We used hydrologically modeled data as input for 2D hydraulic modeling. Our results show that, even though the MHQ will increase in the future (2050-2079), the erosional power of the flow will decrease on the study area. This can be attributed to the change of timing in floods from spring to autumn and winter, when the sea levels during flood peaks is higher, causing backwater effect. Even though the mean depth will not increase notably (from 1.14 m to 1.25 m) during MHQ, compared to the control period (1985-2014), the inundated area will expand by 15% due to the flat terrain. The increase in flooding may be restrained by adaptive regulations: strategies favoring ecologically sustainable and recreationally desirable lake water levels were modeled. The demands of environment, society, and hydropower are not necessarily contradictory in terms of climate change adaptation, and regulation could provide an adaptive practice in the areas of increased flooding.
C1 [Kasvi, Elina; Lotsari, Eliisa] Univ Turku, Dept Geog & Geol, Turun 20014, Finland.
   [Lotsari, Eliisa] Univ Eastern Finland, Dept Geog & Hist Studies, Yliopistokatu 2, Joensuu 80101, Finland.
   [Kumpumaki, Miia; Dubrovin, Tanja; Veijalainen, Noora] Finnish Environm Inst, Latokartanonkaari 11, Helsinki 00790, Finland.
C3 University of Turku; University of Eastern Finland; Finnish Environment
   Institute
RP Kasvi, E (corresponding author), Univ Turku, Dept Geog & Geol, Turun 20014, Finland.
EM elina.kasvi@utu.fi
RI Veijalainen, Noora/AAN-4826-2020
OI Lotsari, Eliisa/0000-0002-0120-8722; Veijalainen,
   Noora/0000-0003-4665-933X
FU Academy of Finland [296090, 293389, 307362, 292735]; Emil Aaltonen
   foundation; Department of Geographical and Historical Studies of the
   University of Eastern Finland; Finnish Environment Institute; ELY
   Centres of Finland; Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry of Finland;
   Academy of Finland (AKA) [292735, 293389, 296090, 307362] Funding
   Source: Academy of Finland (AKA)
FX This study was funded by the Academy of Finland (InfraRiver project,
   grant number 296090; COMBAT project, grant number 293389; and Centre of
   Excellence in Laser Scanning Research, grant numbers 307362 and 292735),
   Emil Aaltonen foundation, the Department of Geographical and Historical
   Studies of the University of Eastern Finland, Finnish Environment
   Institute, ELY Centres of Finland and the Ministry of Agriculture and
   Forestry of Finland.
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NR 90
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 9
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD SEP
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 9
AR 1827
DI 10.3390/w11091827
PG 25
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA JB8PJ
UT WOS:000488834400090
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fidélis, T
   Teles, F
   Roebeling, P
   Riazi, F
AF Fidelis, Teresa
   Teles, Filipe
   Roebeling, Peter
   Riazi, Fayaz
TI Governance for Sustainability of Estuarine AreasAssessing Alternative
   Models Using the Case of Ria de Aveiro, Portugal
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE estuaries; governance; sustainability; governance models
ID COASTAL LAGOON RIA; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; WATER MANAGEMENT;
   CLIMATE-CHANGE; NATURA 2000; RESOURCE; DYNAMICS; IMPLEMENTATION;
   ARRANGEMENTS; INSTITUTIONS
AB Estuaries are one of the most productive and complex types of ecosystems supporting a wide range of economic activities. Departing from a set of governance problems and emergent goals, such as sustainability or climate change adaptation faced by an estuarine case study area, Ria de Aveiro, in Portugal, this article assesses the adequacy of alternative governance models under the existing water resources legal framework and traditional political culture. It shows that apart from the centrally-based compliance model, all other alternatives require high degrees of institutional reforms. Moreover, although the model based on a dedicated new agency, long preferred by many users of Ria de Aveiro, is the most understandable and focused, it does not assure the pursuance of adaptability or collaboration, which are considered essential for estuary governance. As it relies on collective action and multi-level and multi-agent contexts, estuarine governance may require a new institutional design. Where one begins a process of institutional change, however, is not a simple issue to address and demands a deeper analysis, particularly on the types of required institutional changes, as well as on their impacts on policy and decision-making outcomes over estuarine environments and associated socio-ecological networks.
C1 [Fidelis, Teresa] Univ Aveiro, Dept Environm & Planning, Res Unit Governance Competitiveness & Publ Polici, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Teles, Filipe] Univ Aveiro, Dept Social Polit & Terr Sci, Res Unit Governance Competitiveness & Publ Polici, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Roebeling, Peter] Univ Aveiro, Dept Environm & Planning, Ctr Environm & Marine Studies, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
   [Riazi, Fayaz] Univ Aveiro, Dept Environm & Planning, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Aveiro; Universidade de Aveiro; Universidade de Aveiro;
   Universidade de Aveiro
RP Fidélis, T (corresponding author), Univ Aveiro, Dept Environm & Planning, Res Unit Governance Competitiveness & Publ Polici, P-3810193 Aveiro, Portugal.
EM teresafidelis@ua.pt; teresafidelis@ua.pt; peter.roebeling@ua.pt;
   fayaz.riazi@ua.pt
RI Fidélis, Teresa/F-2677-2012; Teles, Filipe/M-4582-2013; Roebeling,
   Peter/G-6233-2011
OI Riazi, Fayaz/0000-0001-5935-4485; Teles, Filipe/0000-0002-5059-368X;
   Fidelis, Teresa/0000-0002-6594-2571; Roebeling,
   Peter/0000-0002-2421-9299
FU Research Unit on Governance, Competitiveness and Public Policies
   (GOVCOPP) - European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) through COMPETE
   2020 [POCI-01-0145-FEDER-008540]; national funds through the Foundation
   for Science and Technology/Ministry of Science, Technology and Higher
   Education (FCT/MCTES); Center for Environmental and Marine Studies
   (CESAM) [UID/AMB/50017/2019]; FEDER within the PT2020 Partnership
   Agreement and Compete 2020
FX The authors are grateful for the valuable contributions of the experts
   involved in the focus group exercises. Thanks are due for the support of
   the Research Unit on Governance, Competitiveness and Public Policies
   (GOVCOPP) (POCI-01-0145-FEDER-008540) funded by European Regional
   Development Fund (FEDER) through COMPETE 2020 and by national funds
   through the Foundation for Science and Technology/Ministry of Science,
   Technology and Higher Education (FCT/MCTES), and Center for
   Environmental and Marine Studies (CESAM) (UID/AMB/50017/2019), to
   FCT/MCTES through national funds, and the co-funding by the FEDER,
   within the PT2020 Partnership Agreement and Compete 2020.
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NR 89
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 4
U2 11
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD APR
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 4
AR 846
DI 10.3390/w11040846
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA IF5FC
UT WOS:000473105700216
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Archie, KM
   Chapman, R
   Flood, S
AF Archie, Kelli M.
   Chapman, Ralph
   Flood, Stephen
TI Climate change response in New Zealand communities: Local scale
   adaptation and mitigation planning
SO ENVIRONMENTAL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation and mitigation; Local scale planning; Online
   survey; Barriers; Perceptions of climate change
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; FOREST MANAGEMENT; INFORMATION; AOTEAROA; BARRIERS;
   ADOPTION; HEALTH; RISKS
AB This paper investigates climate change adaptation and mitigation planning responses of New Zealand communities, using an online survey of local elected representatives. Climate change is affecting New Zealand through changes in precipitation patterns, increases in temperature, changes to the frequency and duration of droughts, sea level rise, and the increased occurrence of extreme events. These impacts highlight the vulnerability of key economic activities, communities, and infrastructure. As environmental and socioeconomic vulnerability varies with place, local level climate change policies are important tools to increase resilience when faced with a changing climate. The research survey, targeted towards local elected representatives, unpacks local scale climate change planning efforts across the country, as well as decision-maker perceptions of barriers and motivations in the area of climate change planning. Findings suggest that increasing local-scale responses hinges on public perception of the urgency of climate change, which is heavily influenced by national priorities. Furthermore, support for national level responses is limited by a collective view of climate change as an issue of an uncertain future, rather than one of present concern. Thus, the inclination to act at the local level is to some extent undermined by slow national action.
C1 [Archie, Kelli M.; Flood, Stephen] Victoria Univ Wellington, CCRI, Sch Geog Environm & Earth Sci, PoB 600, Wellington 6012, New Zealand.
   [Archie, Kelli M.; Chapman, Ralph] Victoria Univ Wellington, Environm Studies, Sch Geog Environm & Earth Sci, PoB 600, Wellington 6012, New Zealand.
   [Flood, Stephen] Univ Coll Cork, MaREI Ctr Marine & Renewable Energy, Environm Res Inst, Ringaskiddy, County Cork, Ireland.
C3 Victoria University Wellington; Victoria University Wellington;
   University College Cork
RP Archie, KM (corresponding author), Victoria Univ Wellington, CCRI, Sch Geog Environm & Earth Sci, PoB 600, Wellington 6012, New Zealand.; Archie, KM (corresponding author), Victoria Univ Wellington, Environm Studies, Sch Geog Environm & Earth Sci, PoB 600, Wellington 6012, New Zealand.
EM kelli.archie@vuw.ac.nz
OI Archie, Kelli/0000-0001-9348-8073; Flood, Stephen/0000-0001-8206-737X
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NR 76
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 2
U2 43
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2211-4645
EI 2211-4653
J9 ENVIRON DEV
JI Environ. Dev.
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 28
BP 19
EP 31
DI 10.1016/j.envdev.2018.09.003
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HB5UW
UT WOS:000451129400003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Koop, S
   Gomes, FM
   Schoot, L
   Dieperink, C
   Driessen, P
   Van Leeuwen, K
AF Koop, Steven
   Gomes, Fabian Monteiro
   Schoot, Laura
   Dieperink, Carel
   Driessen, Peter
   Van Leeuwen, Kees
TI Assessing the Capacity to Govern Flood Risk in Cities and the Role of
   Contextual Factors
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE water governance; governance capacity; comparative studies; urban
   flooding; contextual factors
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABLE WATER; CHALLENGES; MANAGEMENT;
   BARRIERS; ENGLAND; PERCEPTION; POLICIES; WASTE; WALES
AB Sea level rise and increased storm events urge cities to develop governance capacity. However, a cohesive conceptual and empirical-based understanding of what governance capacity implies, how to measure it, and what cities can learn, is largely lacking. Understanding the influence of context is critical to address this issue. Accordingly, we aim to identify crosscutting contextual factors and how they prioritise different elements of governance capacity to address urban flood risk. In doing so, a framework of nine conditions and 27 indicators is applied in two Dutch cities and two cities in the United Kingdom. Three crosscutting contextual factors are identified that may explain differences in capacity-development priorities: (1) flood probability and impact; (2) national imposed institutional setting; and, (3) level of authority to secure long-term financial support. Capacity-priorities include, the recent political devolution in the UK, which emphasizes the role of citizen awareness, stakeholder engagement, entrepreneurial agents, and the overall necessity for local capacity-development. The Dutch focus on flood safety through centralised public coordination reduces flood probability but inhibits incentives to reduce flood impacts and lowers public awareness. In conclusion, the three identified contextual factors enable a better understanding of capacity-building priorities and may facilitate learning between cities.
C1 [Koop, Steven; Gomes, Fabian Monteiro; Schoot, Laura; Dieperink, Carel; Driessen, Peter; Van Leeuwen, Kees] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Heidelberglaan 2, NL-3584 CS Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Koop, Steven; Van Leeuwen, Kees] KWR Watercycle Res Inst, Groningenhaven 7, NL-3430 BB Nieuwegein, Netherlands.
C3 Utrecht University; KWR Watercycle Research Institute
RP Koop, S (corresponding author), Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Heidelberglaan 2, NL-3584 CS Utrecht, Netherlands.; Koop, S (corresponding author), KWR Watercycle Res Inst, Groningenhaven 7, NL-3430 BB Nieuwegein, Netherlands.
EM stef.koop@kwrwater.nl; faab_GM@hotmail.com; lauraschoot@gmail.com;
   C.Dieperink@uu.nl; p.driessen@uu.nl; Kees.van.Leeuwen@kwrwater.nl
RI Dieperink, Carel/M-4458-2013; Koop, Steven/J-8116-2019; van Leeuwen,
   Kees/S-5815-2016; Driessen, Peter/M-6751-2013
OI van Leeuwen, Kees/0000-0003-1605-4268; Koop, Steven/0000-0001-9906-3746;
   Dieperink, Carel/0000-0002-1926-4642; Driessen,
   Peter/0000-0002-0724-6666
FU European Commission [687809]; H2020 - Industrial Leadership [687809]
   Funding Source: H2020 - Industrial Leadership
FX The European Commission is acknowledged for funding POWER in H2020-Water
   Under Grant Agreement No. 687809.
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NR 69
TC 18
Z9 19
U1 0
U2 21
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD AUG
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 8
AR 2869
DI 10.3390/su10082869
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GW3CI
UT WOS:000446767700285
OA gold, Green Published, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Baron, N
   Petersen, LK
AF Baron, Nina
   Petersen, Lars Kjerulf
TI Climate change or variable weather: rethinking Danish homeowners'
   perceptions of floods and climate
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Flood risk; Homeowners; Tim Ingold;
   Landscape; Actor-network theory
ID RISK; TEMPORALITY; LANDSCAPE; PEOPLE
AB Climate scenarios predict that an effect of climate change will be more areas at risk of extensive flooding. This article builds on a qualitative case study of homeowners in the flood-prone area of Lolland in Denmark and uses the theories of Tim Ingold and Bruno Latour to rethink the way we understand homeowners' perception of climate change and local flood risk. Ingold argues that those perceptions are shaped by people's experiences with and connections to their local landscape. People experience the local variability of the weather, and not global climate change as presented in statistical data and models. This influences the way they understand the future risks of climate change. Concurrently, with the theory of Latour, we can understand how those experiences with the local landscape are mediated by the existing water-managing technologies such as pumps and dikes. These technologies prevent the residents in Lolland from experiencing many of the changes that are already occurring and, at the same time, give them a feeling of being able to control the water to the extent that it is prevented from flooding their homes, both now and in the future. The combination of these two theoretical approaches gives new insights as to why people living in flood-prone areas are not very concerned about climate change.
C1 [Baron, Nina; Petersen, Lars Kjerulf] Aarhus Univ, Dept Environm Sci, DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark.
C3 Aarhus University
RP Baron, N (corresponding author), Aarhus Univ, Dept Environm Sci, Frederiksborgvej 399,POB 358, DK-4000 Roskilde, Denmark.
EM nba@dmu.dk; lkpe@dmu.dk
RI Petersen, Lars/AAI-3371-2021
OI Baron, Nina/0000-0002-1375-9740; Kjerulf Petersen,
   Lars/0000-0001-6753-8276
FU Norden Top-level Research Initiative sub-programme 'Effect Studies and
   Adaptation to Climate Change' through the Nordic Centre of Excellence
   for Strategic Adaptation Research (NORD-STAR) [36780]
FX The research was funded by Norden Top-level Research Initiative
   sub-programme 'Effect Studies and Adaptation to Climate Change' through
   the Nordic Centre of Excellence for Strategic Adaptation Research
   (NORD-STAR), project no 36780.
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NR 33
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 0
U2 32
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD AUG
PY 2015
VL 15
IS 6
SI SI
BP 1145
EP 1155
DI 10.1007/s10113-014-0701-1
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CN2ZY
UT WOS:000358294000017
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Singletary, L
   Sterle, K
AF Singletary, Loretta
   Sterle, Kelley
TI Supporting local adaptation through the co-production of climate
   information: An evaluation of collaborative research processes and
   outcomes
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Collaborative research; Project evaluation; Local climate adaptation;
   Climate information; Snow-fed river system
ID DECISION-SUPPORT; TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH; STAKEHOLDER ANALYSIS;
   WATER; KNOWLEDGE; EXPECTATIONS; SIMULATION; PRINCIPLES; USABILITY;
   FRAMEWORK
AB Water for the Seasons was a five-year collaborative research project which aimed to assess the climate resiliency of the Truckee-Carson River System, a snow-fed river system in the western United States. The collaborative research design featured iterative interactions involving an interdisciplinary research team and local stakeholders that produced climate science information identified by stakeholders as necessary to support adaptation to climate-induced water supply variability. This information included plausible climate scenarios to test the resiliency of the river system and models simulating hydrologic results to examine changes in water availability. In this paper, we present formative and summative evaluation data collected over the course of the project to determine the extent to which this collaborative research project met stakeholders' climate science information needs. Results indicate that over a five-year period, the project: 1) co-produced new climate science information to support local climate adaptation; 2) consistently engaged stakeholders in research that facilitated social learning to identify innovative strategies to adapt water management; 3) provided iterative interactions between stakeholders and researchers to ensure resulting information services were useful to stakeholders; 4) combined diverse, practical stakeholder knowledge with rigorous scientific research to co-produce legitimate climate science information; and 5) effectively utilized Extension as a boundary organization to design, implement, and evaluate collaborative research processes and outcomes. Further empirical work is necessary to continue testing and standardizing metrics that illuminate collaborative research successes and failures, and to identify best practices that guide future collaborations to co-produce climate science information.
C1 [Singletary, Loretta; Sterle, Kelley] Univ Nevada, Global Water Ctr, 1072 Evans Ave, Reno, NV 89557 USA.
   [Singletary, Loretta; Sterle, Kelley] Univ Nevada, Grad Program Hydrol Sci, 1664 North Virginia St, Reno, NV 89557 USA.
   [Singletary, Loretta; Sterle, Kelley] Univ Nevada, Extens, 1664 North Virginia St, Reno, NV 89557 USA.
   [Singletary, Loretta] Univ Nevada, Dept Econ, 1664 North Virginia St,MS 0204, Reno, NV 89557 USA.
C3 Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno;
   Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno;
   Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno;
   Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno
RP Singletary, L (corresponding author), Univ Nevada, Dept Econ, 1664 North Virginia St,MS 0204, Reno, NV 89557 USA.
EM singletaryl@unr.edu
OI Singletary, Loretta/0000-0002-7118-7998
FU National Science Foundation Division of Earth Sciences Water
   Sustainability and Climate program [1360506]; U.S. Department of
   Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture
   [2014-67003-22105]; Division Of Earth Sciences; Directorate For
   Geosciences [1360506] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX This research was supported by the National Science Foundation Division
   of Earth Sciences Water Sustainability and Climate program (award
   #1360506), and the U.S. Department of Agriculture National Institute of
   Food and Agriculture (award #2014-67003-22105).The authors acknowledge
   local Truckee-Carson River System stakeholders who contributed
   substantively to this study, especially the Stakeholder Affiliate Group
   for their consistent participation. The authors would also like to thank
   Nicholas Babin for sharing qualitative data that enhanced the robustness
   of our evaluative analysis. The authors also acknowledge the project
   researchers, especially Greg Pohll (formerly Desert Research Institute,
   now Truckee Meadows Water Authority) for his review of this manuscript,
   as well as Maureen McCarthy, Gi-Eu Lee and Kim Rollins (University of
   Nevada, Reno); Shey Rajagopal, Justin Huntington, and Christine Albano
   (Desert Research Institute); Mike Dettinger, Rich Niswonger, Eric
   Morway, Wesley Kitlasten and Murphy Gardner (U.S. Geological Survey);
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NR 92
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 3
U2 16
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 20
AR 100201
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2020.100201
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA PH1SK
UT WOS:000600201200009
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ceranic, B
   Beardmore, J
   Cox, A
AF Ceranic, Boris
   Beardmore, John
   Cox, Adrian
TI Rapid deployment modular building solutions and climatic adaptability:
   Case based study of a novel approach to "thermal capacity on demand"
SO ENERGY AND BUILDINGS
LA English
DT Article
DE Thermal capacity; Climatic adaptability; Modular; Sustainable; Rapid
   deployment; Transportable; Building management system
ID ENERGY; STORAGE
AB In this research, a novel "thermal capacity on demand" approach to modular thermal storage design has been discussed, seen as a key to the climatic adaptability of a proposed Smart-POD building system and its energy performance. Smart-POD is a unique and innovative research project which provides an alternative to traditional classroom design. It proposes a rapid deployment building solution, temporary or permanent in its use, modular in design, flexible in set-up and self-sustaining in use, requiring minimal site preparation, and meeting all its energy demands from renewable energy sources. Its feasibility was tested by a design case study which investigated climatic adaptability based on the proposed approach. This approach uniquely combines balancing of energy demand and supply using renewable technologies and a bespoke low temperature thermal store. It further proposes to use an open source Building energy Management System (oBeMS) conceived in this research, to intelligently manage thermal, ventilation and humidity control strategies which adapt to the climate, season and weather in which the building is placed. The predicted performance of proposed system demonstrates potential for an effective diurnal climatic adaptability, enhanced by integrated passive design strategies, and intelligent modes of building control. The method of BIM integrated sustainable design analysis (SDA) and building management system (BMS) has also been deliberated, as a framework for exploring the integration of proposed building management system into smart building environments (SBEs). Crown Copyright (C) 2018 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Ceranic, Boris] Univ Derby, Markeaton St, Derby DE22 3AW, England.
   [Beardmore, John] T4 Sustainabil, Derby, England.
   [Cox, Adrian] Green 4 Architects, Derby, England.
C3 University of Derby
RP Ceranic, B (corresponding author), Univ Derby, Markeaton St, Derby DE22 3AW, England.
EM b.ceranic@derby.ac.uk
OI Ceranic, Boris/0000-0002-9672-5588
FU Sustainable Construction INet
FX Sustainable Construction INet-funding body, Lord Stafford Awards-Highly
   Commended in Category "Innovative Collaboration", EKV Design (J. Grey
   and C. Bridges)-Collaborating Partner, T4 Sustainability Ltd (J.
   Beardmore)-Collaborating Partner, Carnwell & Cox Architects (A.
   Cox)-Collaborating Partner, De Montfort University (P.
   Ford)-Collaborating Partner, TBAT Innovation, EMRE Ltd., Erika Bitto and
   Kevin Meakin-graduates.
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NR 49
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 2
U2 39
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA PO BOX 564, 1001 LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND
SN 0378-7788
EI 1872-6178
J9 ENERG BUILDINGS
JI Energy Build.
PD MAY 15
PY 2018
VL 167
BP 124
EP 135
DI 10.1016/j.enbuild.2018.01.044
PG 12
WC Construction & Building Technology; Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA GD6PK
UT WOS:000430630700011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lieberknecht, K
AF Lieberknecht, Katherine
TI Leading with Local Knowledge: Climate Adaptation, Local Knowledge, and
   Participation in Austin, Texas' Network of Plans and the Co-Designed
   Climate Navigators' Tool and Process
SO JOURNAL OF PLANNING EDUCATION AND RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; community-based climate planning; community-based
   participatory research; local knowledge; participation
ID CITIZEN PARTICIPATION; QUALITY; JUSTICE; VULNERABILITY; INFORMATION;
   POLITICS
AB Planning theory scholars and practitioners have identified the need to include residents most affected by climate change in the development of climate adaptation planning, for reasons of justice and effectiveness. This article investigates whether Austin, Texas' network of plans includes participation by residents and incorporation of local knowledge into climate adaptation. This research finds that these plans contain limited material about participation, engagement, equity, and local knowledge. In response to this gap, the article presents a case study of the Dove Springs Climate Navigators, a residents-nongovernmental organization-municipal-university collaboration working to co-create an online portal, training system, and process to incorporate local knowledge into adaptation planning.
C1 [Lieberknecht, Katherine] Univ Texas Austin, 310 Inner Campus Dr Stop B7500, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin
RP Lieberknecht, K (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, 310 Inner Campus Dr Stop B7500, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
EM klieberknecht@utexas.edu
OI Lieberknecht, Katherine/0000-0002-4168-7457
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NR 87
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 8
U2 15
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0739-456X
EI 1552-6577
J9 J PLAN EDUC RES
JI J. Plan. Educ. Res.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 44
IS 4
BP 2041
EP 2055
DI 10.1177/0739456X221144610
EA JAN 2023
PG 15
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA L4B1K
UT WOS:000911148700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Bai, H
   Liu, JP
   Jiang, SG
   He, WF
   Li, LG
AF Bai, Hui
   Liu, Jiaping
   Jiang, Shuguang
   He, Wenfang
   Li, Longge
BE Xiao, Y
   Li, Z
   Wang, R
   Shan, B
   Ghavami, K
TI Study on Climate Adaptability of Traditional Houses with
   Earth-envelopment Wall in Turpan
SO NOVEL AND NON-CONVENTIONAL MATERIALS AND TECHNOLOGIES FOR SUSTAINABILITY
SE Key Engineering Materials
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 13th International Conference on Non-Conventional Materials and
   Technologies
CY SEP 22-24, 2011
CL Changsha, PEOPLES R CHINA
SP Int Comm NonConvent Mat & Technol, Natl Nat Sci Fdn China, Hunan Univ, China Minist Educ Key Lab Bldg Safety & Energy Efficiency, Int Network Bamboo & Rattan, Assoc Brasileira Mat & Tecnol NaoConvenc, Pontificia Univ Catolica Rio de Janeiro, Univ So California
DE Traditional houses; Climate Adaptability; Turpan; Earth-envelopment;
   Sustainable
AB Precious Ecological Experience in Traditional houses should be inherited and developed. However, it is washing away as urbanization. In this study, based on the field study in villages in Turpan, the Climate Adaptability of traditional houses is summarized from building landform, function, internal space and construction mode. Then indoor thermal environment in winter is tested, and the results show that the traditional houses with earth-envelopment wall have the ecological properties, which can maintain a balanced indoor thermal environment. In addition, advice on sustainable development of these traditional houses is discussed.
C1 [Bai, Hui; Liu, Jiaping; He, Wenfang; Li, Longge] Xlan Univ Architecture & Technol, Coll Architecture, Xian 710055, Shaanxi, Peoples R China.
   [Jiang, Shuguang] Shihezi Univ, Coll Water Conservancy Architectural Engn, Shihezi Xinjiang 832003, Peoples R China.
C3 Shihezi University
RP Bai, H (corresponding author), Xlan Univ Architecture & Technol, Coll Architecture, Xian 710055, Shaanxi, Peoples R China.
EM 83085609@qq.com
FU National Natural Science Foundation of Creative Research Groups of China
   [50921005]
FX The research described in this paper was fully supported by the grant of
   National Natural Science Foundation of Creative Research Groups of China
   (No. 50921005).
CR Jiang Shuguang, 2004, SHANXI ARCHITECTURE
   Liu Jiaping, 2006, ARCHITECTURAL PHYS
   Liu Jiaping, 2006, TIME ARCHITECTURE
   Oikonomou A, 2011, BUILD ENVIRON, V46, P669, DOI 10.1016/j.buildenv.2010.09.012
   Rukeya Tu'erdi, 2008, HUAZHONG ARCHITECTUR
   Touman IA, 2005, BUILD ENVIRON, V40, P1076, DOI 10.1016/j.buildenv.2004.10.002
   Zhao Qun, 2005, NEW ARCHITECTURE
NR 7
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 34
PU TRANS TECH PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI DURNTEN-ZURICH
PA KREUZSTRASSE 10, 8635 DURNTEN-ZURICH, SWITZERLAND
SN 1013-9826
J9 KEY ENG MATER
PY 2012
VL 517
BP 274
EP +
DI 10.4028/www.scientific.net/KEM.517.274
PG 2
WC Materials Science, Multidisciplinary
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Materials Science
GA BBY69
UT WOS:000308846900040
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thorne, JH
   Santos, MJ
   Bjorkman, J
   Soong, O
   Ikegami, M
   Seo, C
   Hannah, L
AF Thorne, James H.
   Santos, Maria J.
   Bjorkman, Jacquelyn
   Soong, Oliver
   Ikegami, Makihiko
   Seo, Changwan
   Hannah, Lee
TI Does infill outperform climate-adaptive growth policies in meeting
   sustainable urbanization goals? A scenario-based study in California,
   USA
SO LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban growth model; Scenario modeling; infill; UPlan; Climate mitigation
   and adaptation; Sustainable urbanization
ID LAND-USE CHANGE; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; URBAN EXPANSION; IMPACTS; ECOLOGY;
   STOCKS; FOOD
AB Land allocation for urban growth is central to sustainable development strategy because urban growth can impact space available for food production, ecosystem services and biodiversity conservation. Urbanization is a growing stressor due the 2.5 billion additional people projected to live in urban areas by 2050. Potential climate change impacts to natural systems increase the need for sustainable urbanization, which should integrate land use needs for urban growth with climate adaptation objectives such as maintaining biodiversity, food production and ecosystem services. Here we compare climate-neutral and climate-adaptive urbanization scenarios to see which produces the most sustainable urbanization, defined as being the most effective at meeting development, conservation, and two climate adaptation objectives. We modeled five urban growth scenarios portraying an increase of 25.8 million people by 2050 for California, USA comprising three climate-neutral scenarios: business-as-usual, compact-new-growth and infill (redevelopment); and two climate-adaptive scenarios: preservation of agricultural climate refugia or future plant dispersal corridors. Infill was the least impacting for the multiple objectives tested; preserving 46-57% more land for other uses. Each climate-adaptive scenario reduced land consumption for its respective target, but increased impacts to the opposite climate-adaptive scenario target. Infill has the potential to contribute towards sustainable urbanization, particularly if combined with other climate adaptation targets. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Thorne, James H.; Bjorkman, Jacquelyn] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Environm Sci & Policy, Environm Informat Ctr, One Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
   [Santos, Maria J.] Univ Utrecht, Dept Innovat Environm & Energy Sci, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Heidelberglaan 2, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Soong, Oliver; Ikegami, Makihiko; Hannah, Lee] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Bren Sch Environm Sci & Management, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA.
   [Seo, Changwan] Natl Inst Ecol, Div Climate & Ecol, 1210 Geumgang Ro, Seocheon Gun 325813, Chungcheongnam, South Korea.
C3 University of California System; University of California Davis; Utrecht
   University; University of California System; University of California
   Santa Barbara; National Institute of Ecology
RP Thorne, JH (corresponding author), Univ Calif Davis, Dept Environm Sci & Policy, Environm Informat Ctr, One Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
EM jhthorne@ucdavis.edu
RI IKEGAMI, Makihiko/E-6612-2012; Santos, Maria Joao/M-5034-2013
OI Thorne, James/0000-0002-9130-9921; IKEGAMI,
   Makihiko/0000-0002-7760-7973; Santos, Maria Joao/0000-0002-6558-7477
FU California Energy Commission; Spatial History Project (Wallenberg
   Foundation); Bill Lane Center for the American West at Stanford
   University
FX This research was funded by the California Energy Commission, and by the
   Spatial History Project (Wallenberg Foundation) and the Bill Lane Center
   for the American West at Stanford University. Thanks to professors Ellen
   Damschen (U. Wisconsin, Madison) and Susan Harrison (University of
   California, Davis) for sharing of data used in the species distribution
   modeling.
CR Beardsley K, 2009, LANDSCAPE URBAN PLAN, V93, P172, DOI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2009.07.003
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NR 40
TC 23
Z9 23
U1 7
U2 72
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0169-2046
EI 1872-6062
J9 LANDSCAPE URBAN PLAN
JI Landsc. Urban Plan.
PD JAN
PY 2017
VL 157
BP 483
EP 492
DI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2016.08.013
PG 10
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies; Geography; Geography, Physical; Regional
   & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Physical Geography; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA EF2VI
UT WOS:000390183300044
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vandamme, E
   Manners, R
   Adewopo, J
   Thiele, G
   Friedmann, M
   Thornton, P
AF Vandamme, Elke
   Manners, Rhys
   Adewopo, Julius
   Thiele, Graham
   Friedmann, Michael
   Thornton, Philip
TI Strategizing research and development investments in climate change
   adaptation for root, tuber and banana crops in the African Great Lakes
   Region: A spatial prioritisation and targeting framework
SO AGRICULTURAL SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Prioritisation; Targeting; Climate smart agriculture; Climate risk;
   Roots tubers and bananas; Climate hotspots
ID SMALLHOLDER FARMING SYSTEMS; RECOMMENDATION DOMAINS; AGRICULTURE;
   INTERVENTIONS; INNOVATION; ADOPTION; LESSONS; IMPACT; MODEL
AB CONTEXT: Given the significance of climate change impacts on farming communities, large investments are made by research and development actors, including farmers themselves, to adapt agricultural systems. A data -driven approach is required to guide these investments and maximize their impact. In the African Great Lakes Region (GLR), root, tuber and banana (RT&B) crops are a vital component of smallholder farming systems, but little is known about strategies to mitigate climate change impacts on these crops.OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to develop a spatial prioritisation and targeting framework based on the risk of climate-related impacts to guide research investments and prioritisation in CSA for RT&B crops in the GLR.METHODS: Climate change impact data on crop suitability were layered onto other spatially-explicit biophysical and socio-economic data to map clusters of homologous regions, called socio-agroeocological homologues (SAHs). The SAHs were defined by the risk of climate-related impacts, resulting from the interaction of hazards,exposure and vulnerability. The framework was applied to RT&B crops (banana, potato, cassava and sweet -potato) in the African GLR. Its utility was illustrated by elaborating adaptation scenarios for selected SAHs of one long-duration (banana) and one short-duration (potato) RT&B crop.RESULTS AND CONCLUSION: Four SAHs were identified for banana, potato and sweetpotato and five for cassava. For each crop, SAHs were prioritised for investment in climate change adaptation based on the level of risk of climate-related impacts. Scenario analysis showed that the introduction of drought-tolerant varieties would in-crease suitability for banana from 0.30 to 0.47 under baseline conditions and from 0.54 to 0.71 under future climates in a prioritised SAH with low to moderate suitability for typical varieties. For potato, the introduction of heat-tolerant genotypes, intercropping with legumes or the combination of both would allow compensating negative impacts of climate change on crop suitability in two SAHs representing important mid-altitude potato growing areas, from an average of-0.19 and-0.16 to an average of up to +0.25 and + 0.15 respectively. Scaling approaches should consider the difference in socio-economic conditions between the two SAHs.SIGNIFICANCE: We envision the framework to be useful for a diverse range of users throughout the innovation and scaling continuum to understand where climate change impacts are expected to be most severe, what type of innovations are needed to help farmers adapt, and how these innovations should be scaled to enable uptake by considering socio-economic drivers of adoption.
C1 [Vandamme, Elke] Int Potato Ctr CIP, Rwan, Kigali, Rwanda.
   [Manners, Rhys; Adewopo, Julius] Int Inst Trop Agr IITA, Kigali, Rwanda.
   [Thiele, Graham; Friedmann, Michael] Int Potato Ctr CIP, CGIAR Res Program Roots Tubers & Bananas, Lima, Peru.
   [Thornton, Philip] Clim Eat, Netherlands Food Partnership, Utrecht, Netherlands.
C3 CGIAR; International Potato Center (CIP); CGIAR; International Potato
   Center (CIP)
RP Vandamme, E (corresponding author), Int Potato Ctr CIP, Rwan, Kigali, Rwanda.
EM e.vandamme@cgiar.org
RI Vandamme, Elke/C-2506-2016
FU CGIAR Research Program on Roots, Tubers and Bananas (RTB); CGIAR
   Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security
   (CCAFS); CGIAR Trust Fund; Belgian Directorate General for Development
   Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid (DGDC); Consortium for Improving
   Agricultural Livelihoods in Central Africa
FX We would like to thank James Legg and Bernard Vanlauwe for providing
   useful comments to earlier versions of the manuscript. This research was
   undertaken as part of, and funded jointly by, the CGIAR Research Program
   on Roots, Tubers and Bananas (RTB) and the CGIAR Research Program on
   Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS) , which are both
   carried out with support from the CGIAR Trust Fund. For details, please
   visit https:// www.cgiar.org/funders/and https://ccafs.cgiar.org/donors.
   Additional funding support for this work was provided by the Belgian
   Directorate General for Development Cooperation and Humanitarian Aid
   (DGDC) through the Consortium for Improving Agricultural Livelihoods in
   Central Africa (CIALCA - www.cialca.org) . The views expressed in this
   document cannot be taken to reflect the official opinions of all these
   funding organisations.
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NR 58
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 1
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0308-521X
EI 1873-2267
J9 AGR SYST
JI Agric. Syst.
PD OCT
PY 2022
VL 202
AR 103464
DI 10.1016/j.agsy.2022.103464
EA SEP 2022
PG 14
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 4Q4WO
UT WOS:000856084700002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Valkering, P
   van der Brugge, R
   Offermans, A
   Rijkens-Klomp, N
AF Valkering, P.
   van der Brugge, R.
   Offermans, A.
   Rijkens-Klomp, N.
TI Scenario analysis of perspective change to support climate adaptation:
   lessons from a pilot study on Dutch river management
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Scenario analysis; River management; Perspectives mapping tool;
   Stakeholder participation; Climate adaptation
AB Climate adaptation is a complex task surrounded by uncertainty. To support climate adaptation policies, a new scenario approach is pursued to explore possible discontinuous future developments of societal perspectives on climate adaptation issues. The scenario approach was tested for a case study on Dutch river management. In a series of scenario development workshops, a select group of stakeholders explored the perspectives on the management of the River Meuse in the past, present, and future. The process was supported by an analytical perspectives mapping tool to illustrate and analyze the development of perspectives over time. The process and analytical tools contributed to insight into the drivers of perspective change for the case study at hand. Moreover, the stakeholders highlighted the potential of the approach for water management policy for creating awareness about the plurality of perspectives and the dynamics of perspective change, monitoring perspectives and perspective change as part of a flexible policy approach, and anticipating on the occurrence of shock events. Further work is required to better represent the social dynamics of perspectives change, to better empirically ground the perspective change model, and to apply integrated water models in the scenario development process to assess water-society interactions.
C1 [Valkering, P.; Offermans, A.; Rijkens-Klomp, N.] Maastricht Univ, Int Ctr Integrated Assessment & Sustainable Dev I, NL-6200 MD Maastricht, Netherlands.
   [van der Brugge, R.] Deltares, NL-3584 BK Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Rijkens-Klomp, N.] Pantopicon, B-2600 Antwerp, Belgium.
C3 Maastricht University; Deltares
RP Valkering, P (corresponding author), Maastricht Univ, Int Ctr Integrated Assessment & Sustainable Dev I, POB 616, NL-6200 MD Maastricht, Netherlands.
EM p.valkering@maastrichtuniversity.nl
OI Offermans, Astrid/0000-0001-5253-6593
FU Dutch 'Living with Water' program [P1015]
FX This research was funded by the Dutch 'Living with Water' program
   (Project P1015) and benefits from the follow-up project Perspectives in
   Integrated Water Resource Management in River Deltas. We would like to
   thank all workshop participants for their valuable contributions.
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NR 38
TC 18
Z9 19
U1 0
U2 15
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2011
VL 11
IS 2
BP 229
EP 241
DI 10.1007/s10113-010-0146-0
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 772RT
UT WOS:000291253300003
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yu, KJ
AF Yu Kongjian
TI Climate Adaptation and Resilience
SO LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE FRONTIERS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate Change; Climate Adaptation; Resilience; Sponge City; Green
   Infrastructure; Climate Adaptation Summit 2021
AB The international community has made great efforts over the past decades to cope with global climate change. The Paris Agreement highlighted the exigency of "holding the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2 degrees C above pre-industrial levels." At present, however, the world's most effort is devoted to the means of carbon emission reduction, while neglecting adaptation, the other half that "cannot be neglected" in the climate equation. A series of studies have proven the huge potential of nature-based and nature-adapted approaches in building a climate-resilient living environment. In recent years, nature-based green infrastructures and climate-adaptive sponge cities are receiving unprecedented attention. This also poses great challenges and opportunities for landscape architects to develop resilient climate-adaptive green infrastructures by leveraging the power of nature through collaborative design with experts from the fields of Geography, Agriculture, Hydraulic Engineering, and Civil Engineering.
C1 [Yu Kongjian] Peking Univ, Coll Architecture & Landscape, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Yu Kongjian] Amer Acad Arts & Sci, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
C3 Peking University
RP Yu, KJ (corresponding author), Peking Univ, Coll Architecture & Landscape, Beijing, Peoples R China.; Yu, KJ (corresponding author), Amer Acad Arts & Sci, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA.
EM kjyu@urban.pku.edu.cn
CR DiChristopher T., 2019, CNBC 0214
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   National Forestry and Grassland Administration, 2014, MAIN RES 2 SURV NAT
   The Nature Conservancy, PLAYB CLIM ACT
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   United Nations Environment Programme, 2021, GATH STORM AD CLIM C
NR 10
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 5
U2 16
PU HIGHER EDUCATION PRESS
PI BEIJING
PA CHAOYANG DIST, 4, HUIXINDONGJIE, FUSHENG BLDG, BEIJING 100029, PEOPLES R
   CHINA
SN 2096-336X
EI 2095-5413
J9 LANDSC ARCHIT FRONT
JI Landsc. Archit. Front.
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 9
IS 6
BP 5
EP 7
DI 10.15302/J-LAF-1-010021
PG 3
WC Architecture
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Architecture
GA 5D0QO
UT WOS:000864656000001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vujicic, D
   Vasiljevic, N
   Radic, B
   Tutundzic, A
   Galecic, N
   Skocajic, D
   Ocokoljic, M
AF Vujicic, Dragan
   Vasiljevic, Nevena
   Radic, Boris
   Tutundzic, Andreja
   Galecic, Nevenka
   Skocajic, Dejan
   Ocokoljic, Mirjana
TI Conceptualisation of the Regulatory Framework of Green Infrastructure
   for Urban Development: Identifying Barriers and Drivers
SO LAND
LA English
DT Article
DE green infrastructure; conceptual framework; institutional innovation;
   green infrastructure regulation; ecosystem services
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABILITY; ECOSYSTEM; TENSIONS; AREAS
AB Urban green infrastructure plays a crucial role in sustainable city development by offering a multitude of benefits, including improved environmental quality, increased social well-being, and enhanced economic prosperity. Evaluation and monitoring of regulatory implementation stand as essential components in the advancement of urban green infrastructure (GI) as they indicate the efficacy of regulatory acts and enable the assessment of their implementation success and adaptability to identified needs. This study identifies barriers and drivers based on the views of 352 professionals surveyed between 2018 and 2023 in Serbia. The primary data collection method employed questionnaire surveys. This study identified a range of barriers within existing legal frameworks, foremost of which include the lack of coordination and coherence between relevant ministries and governmental agencies, insufficient financial and human resources, the lack of transparency in the regulation development process, the need for strengthening technical capacities, and the absence of an adequate urban GI strategy. This research serves as a foundation for conceptualising GI regulatory elements that enhance urban GI development. Addressing these barriers necessitates efforts to improve coordination and collaboration among stakeholders, increase public participation, and enhance transparency in the regulatory process.
C1 [Vujicic, Dragan; Vasiljevic, Nevena; Radic, Boris; Tutundzic, Andreja; Galecic, Nevenka; Skocajic, Dejan; Ocokoljic, Mirjana] Univ Belgrade, Fac Forestry, Kneza Viseslava 1, Beograd 11000, Serbia.
C3 University of Belgrade
RP Radic, B (corresponding author), Univ Belgrade, Fac Forestry, Kneza Viseslava 1, Beograd 11000, Serbia.
EM dragan.vujicic@sfb.bg.ac.rs; nevena.vasiljevic@sfb.bg.ac.rs;
   boris.radic@sfb.bg.ac.rs; andreja.tutundzic@sfb.bg.ac.rs;
   nevenka.galecic@sfb.bg.ac.rs; dejan.skocajic@sfb.bg.ac.rs;
   mirjana.ocokoljic@sfb.bg.ac.rs
RI Vasiljevic, Nevena/IVU-9345-2023; Radic, Boris/KVB-7852-2024
OI Skocajic, Dejan/0000-0002-2679-3278; Radic, Boris/0000-0002-5748-5139;
   Galecic, Nevenka/0000-0003-2771-4583; Vasiljevic,
   Nevena/0000-0001-8644-7847
FU The Ministry of Education, Science, and Technological Development
FX No Statement Available
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NR 74
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-445X
J9 LAND-BASEL
JI Land
PD MAY
PY 2024
VL 13
IS 5
AR 692
DI 10.3390/land13050692
PG 26
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SC2U2
UT WOS:001232202400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Koen, T
   Coetzee, C
   Kruger, L
   Puren, K
AF Koen, Tiana
   Coetzee, Christo
   Kruger, Leandri
   Puren, Karen
TI Assessing the integration between disaster risk reduction and urban and
   regional planning curricula at tertiary institutions in South Africa
SO TD-THE JOURNAL FOR TRANSDISCIPLINARY RESEARCH IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
LA English
DT Article
DE urban and regional planning; disaster risk reduction; urban planning;
   curriculums; universities; South Africa
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RESILIENCE; SUSTAINABILITY; EDUCATION;
   DYNAMICS
AB Urban areas are increasingly being affected by more frequent and severe disasters. It has been argued in theory and international development policy that the integration of disaster risk reduction (DRR) within existing urban planning (UP) curricula would greatly benefit efforts to build resilient urban environments. However, the current status quo and progress of this crucial transdisciplinary integration in the South African University context remain unclear. Through the application of an exploratory mixed method research design, this article established that UP lecturers at South African universities have a good grasp of the theoretical need for the integration of DRR into existing curriculums and have also tentatively started to integrate DRR into some of their modules. However, because of challenges such as full curricula, financial and human resources constraints and integration predominantly happening on postgraduate level, integration has not occurred in sufficient depth while also missing the opportunity to expose the majority of the student cohort and future urban planners to muchneeded DRR knowledge. Transdisciplinary contribution: This article illuminates the current status of integration across and collaboration between DRR and UP at selected South African Universities.
C1 [Koen, Tiana; Coetzee, Christo; Kruger, Leandri] North West Univ, Fac Nat & Agr Sci, African Ctr Disaster Studies, Unit Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
   [Puren, Karen] North West Univ, Fac Nat & Agr Sci, Unit Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
C3 North West University - South Africa; North West University - South
   Africa
RP Kruger, L (corresponding author), North West Univ, Fac Nat & Agr Sci, African Ctr Disaster Studies, Unit Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
EM leandri.kruger@nwu.ac.za
RI Puren, Karen/S-9169-2017; Coetzee, Christo/M-7816-2017
OI Puren, Karen/0000-0003-3163-0024; Coetzee, Christo/0000-0002-6460-1126
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NR 59
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 1
PU AOSIS
PI Durbanville
PA Postnet Suite 110, Private Bag x 19, Durbanville, SOUTH AFRICA
SN 1817-4434
EI 2415-2005
J9 TD-J TRANSDISCIPL RE
JI TD-J. Transdiscipl. Res. South. Afr.
PD APR 24
PY 2024
VL 20
IS 1
AR a1451
DI 10.4102/td.v20i1.1451
PG 10
WC Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA QS0I1
UT WOS:001222737600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Isola, F
   Leone, F
   Pittau, R
AF Isola, Federica
   Leone, Federica
   Pittau, Rossana
BE Gervasi, O
   Murgante, B
   Garau, C
   Taniar, D
   Rocha, AMAC
   Lago, MNF
TI Urban Heat Island Phenomenon and Ecosystem Services. A Systematic Review
SO COMPUTATIONAL SCIENCE AND ITS APPLICATIONS-ICCSA 2024 WORKSHOPS, PT IV
SE Lecture Notes in Computer Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 24th International Conference on Computational Science and Its
   Applications (ICCSA)
CY JUL 01-04, 2024
CL Thuy Loi Univ, Hanoi, VIETNAM
HO Thuy Loi Univ
DE Urban Heat Island; Local Climate Regulation; Spatial Planning
ID LAND-SURFACE TEMPERATURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LANDSCAPE
   COMPOSITION; THERMAL COMFORT; MITIGATION; RESILIENCE; LEVEL; VEGETATION;
   SATELLITE; FRAMEWORK
AB The increasing rate of urbanization and continuous population growth in urban areas leads to several problems, including the emergence of urban heat islands (UHI), defined as urban areas where temperatures are higher than in the surrounding rural areas. UHIs have negative impacts on the health of populations and lead to increased energy consumption for cooling. One of the main causes of higher temperatures in urban areas and, therefore, the creation of UHIs is impervious surfaces, which in turn lead to poor thermal comfort in cities. Ecosystem services and, in particular, the ecosystem service of local climate regulation are a valuable tools to mitigate the effects of UHI. The contribution reviews the existing literature concerning the mitigation of heat island effects through ecosystem services, in order to understand how they are studied and analyzed in the international scenario. The proposed methodological approach is based on a framework of analysis of the scientific contributions published in the last fifteen years on the subject of UHI, investigating the phenomenon through an interpretation key based on the issues addressed, the methods used and the spatial scales to which these methods have been applied.
C1 [Isola, Federica; Leone, Federica; Pittau, Rossana] Univ Cagliari, Dept Civil & Environm Engn & Architecture, Cagliari, Italy.
C3 University of Cagliari
RP Leone, F (corresponding author), Univ Cagliari, Dept Civil & Environm Engn & Architecture, Cagliari, Italy.
EM federica.isola@unica.it; federicaleone@unica.it; rossana.pittau@unica.it
FU European Union Next-GenerationEU [PE0000005, 351]; Italian Ministry of
   University and Research (MUR) - European Union -NextGenerationEU [CUP
   F53D23010760001, 1378]
FX This study was carried out: i. within the RETURN Extended Partnership
   and received funding from the European Union Next-GenerationEU (National
   Recovery and Resilience Plan -NRRP, Mission 4, Component 2, Investment
   1.3 -D.D. 1243 2/8/2022, PE0000005); ii. with the financial support
   under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), Mission 4,
   Component 2, Investment 1.1, Call for tender No. 1409 published on
   14.9.2022 by the Italian Ministry of University and Research (MUR),
   funded by the European Union -NextGenerationEU-Project Title "Definition
   of a guidelines handbook to implement climate neutrality by improving
   ecosystem service effectiveness in rural and urban areas" - CUP
   F53D23010760001 -Grant Assignment Decree No. 1378 adopted on September
   1, 2023, by the ItalianMinistry ofMinistry of University and Research
   (MUR). For Rossana Pittau. This pubblication was producted while
   attending the PhD programme in Civil Engineering and Architecture at the
   University of Cagliari, Cycle XXXVIII, with the support of a scholarship
   financed by the Ministerial Decree no. 351 of 9th April 2022, based on
   the NRRP -funded by the European Union -NextGenerationEU -Mission 4,
   Component 1, Investment 4.1.
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   ,, 2017, EEA Report
NR 104
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 6
U2 6
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 0302-9743
EI 1611-3349
BN 978-3-031-65272-1; 978-3-031-65273-8
J9 LECT NOTES COMPUT SC
PY 2024
VL 14818
BP 352
EP 369
DI 10.1007/978-3-031-65273-8_23
PG 18
WC Astronomy & Astrophysics; Chemistry, Multidisciplinary; Computer
   Science, Interdisciplinary Applications
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Astronomy & Astrophysics; Chemistry; Computer Science
GA BX7GD
UT WOS:001321407100023
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bozorg-Omid, F
   Kafash, A
   Jafari, R
   Akhavan, AA
   Rahimi, M
   Foroushani, AR
   Youssefi, F
   Shirzadi, MR
   Ostadtaghizadeh, A
   Hanafi-Bojd, AA
AF Bozorg-Omid, Faramarz
   Kafash, Anooshe
   Jafari, Reza
   Akhavan, Amir Ahmad
   Rahimi, Mohammad
   Rahimi Foroushani, Abbas
   Youssefi, Fahimeh
   Shirzadi, Mohammad Reza
   Ostadtaghizadeh, Abbas
   Hanafi-Bojd, Ahmad Ali
TI Predicting current and future high-risk areas for vectors and reservoirs
   of cutaneous leishmaniasis in Iran
SO SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ECOLOGICAL NICHE; BAM DISTRICT; DISTRIBUTIONS;
   TRANSMISSION; PSYCHODIDAE; SUITABILITY; PERFORMANCE; EARTHQUAKE;
   EMERGENCE
AB Climate change will affect the distribution of species in the future. To determine the vulnerable areas relating to CL in Iran, we applied two models, MaxEnt and RF, for the projection of the future distribution of the main vectors and reservoirs of CL. The results of the models were compared in terms of performance, species distribution maps, and the gain, loss, and stable areas. The models provided a reasonable estimate of species distribution. The results showed that the Northern and Southern counties of Iran, which currently do not have a high incidence of CL may witness new foci in the future. The Western, and Southwestern regions of the Country, which currently have high habitat suitability for the presence of some vectors and reservoirs, will probably significantly decrease in the future. Furthermore, the most stable areas are for T. indica and M. hurrianae in the future. So that, this species may remain a major reservoir in areas that are present under current conditions. With more local studies in the field of identifying vulnerable areas to CL, it can be suggested that the national CL control guidelines should be revised to include a section as a climate change adaptation plan.
C1 [Bozorg-Omid, Faramarz; Akhavan, Amir Ahmad; Hanafi-Bojd, Ahmad Ali] Univ Tehran Med Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Vector Biol & Control, Tehran, Iran.
   [Kafash, Anooshe; Hanafi-Bojd, Ahmad Ali] Univ Tehran Med Sci, Zoonoses Res Ctr, Tehran, Iran.
   [Jafari, Reza] Univ Tehran Med Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Esfahan Hlth Res Stn, Tehran, Iran.
   [Rahimi, Mohammad] Semnan Univ, Fac Desert Studies, Dept Combat Desertificat, Semnan, Iran.
   [Rahimi Foroushani, Abbas] Univ Tehran Med Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, Tehran, Iran.
   [Youssefi, Fahimeh] KN Toosi Univ Technol, Fac Geodesy & Geomat Engn, Dept Photogrammetry & Remote Sensing, Tehran, Iran.
   [Shirzadi, Mohammad Reza] Univ Tehran Med Sci, Ctr Res Endem Parasites Iran, Tehran, Iran.
   [Shirzadi, Mohammad Reza] Minist Hlth & Med Educ, Ctr Communicable Dis Control, Tehran, Iran.
   [Ostadtaghizadeh, Abbas] Univ Tehran Med Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Emergencies & Disasters, Tehran, Iran.
C3 Tehran University of Medical Sciences; Tehran University of Medical
   Sciences; Tehran University of Medical Sciences; Semnan University;
   Tehran University of Medical Sciences; K. N. Toosi University of
   Technology; Tehran University of Medical Sciences; Ministry of Health &
   Medical Education (MOHME); Tehran University of Medical Sciences
RP Hanafi-Bojd, AA (corresponding author), Univ Tehran Med Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Vector Biol & Control, Tehran, Iran.; Hanafi-Bojd, AA (corresponding author), Univ Tehran Med Sci, Zoonoses Res Ctr, Tehran, Iran.; Ostadtaghizadeh, A (corresponding author), Univ Tehran Med Sci, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Hlth Emergencies & Disasters, Tehran, Iran.
EM a-ostadtaghizadeh@tums.ac.ir; aahanafibojd@tums.ac.ir
RI Saeb, Mohammad Reza/AER-2724-2022; Ostadtaghizadeh, Abbas/AAO-2137-2020;
   Youssefi, Fahimeh/JRZ-1978-2023; Kafash, Anooshe/AAW-3732-2021
OI Kafash, Anooshe/0000-0002-3671-7068; Youssefi,
   Fahimeh/0000-0002-7265-3866
FU Tehran University of Medical Sciences [53127]
FX The authors of the article express their sincere thanks and appreciation
   to the Communicable Disease Management Center of the Ministry of Health
   and Medical Education (Department of Zoonoses) and Dr. Fatemeh Nikpour
   for coordinating the field visit. Also, we would like to thank the
   Vice-Chancellor of Health of Esfahan University of Medical Sciences for
   assisting in the field survey. We are grateful to the respected
   personnel of the Esfahan Health Research Station, School of Public
   Health, and Tehran University of Medical Sciences, especially Mr.
   Mohammad-Reza Zarean, who provided valuable assistance in conducting
   field studies. The present study was carried out with the financial
   support of the Research Deputy, Tehran University of Medical Sciences,
   Grant No. 53127.
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NR 73
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 7
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2045-2322
J9 SCI REP-UK
JI Sci Rep
PD JUL 17
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 1
AR 11546
DI 10.1038/s41598-023-38515-w
PG 16
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA M8PQ3
UT WOS:001032784200057
PM 37460690
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Allard, M
   L'Hérault, E
   Aubé-Michaud, S
   Carbonneau, AS
   Mathon-Dufour, V
   St-Amour, AB
   Gauthier, S
AF Allard, Michel
   L'Herault, Emmanuel
   Aube-Michaud, Sarah
   Carbonneau, Andree-Sylvie
   Mathon-Dufour, Valerie
   St-Amour, Arianne B.
   Gauthier, Sarah
TI Facing the challenge of permafrost thaw in Nunavik communities:
   innovative integrated methodology, lessons learnt, and recommendations
   to stakeholders
SO ARCTIC SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE permafrost; climate change; geohazards; communities; Nunavik
ID GROUND-PENETRATING RADAR; ICE SEGREGATION; SYSTEM; THERMOKARST; WEDGES
AB To support climate change adaptation in the communities of Nunavik, an innovative multitechnique approach to map permafrost conditions and assess risks of geohazards at the community-scale level was applied. Four maps were produced for each community: (1) a surficial geology map, (2) a map of permafrost conditions based on ground-ice content and depth to bedrock, (3) a map of potential for construction, and (4) a geohazard risk assessment map. Local ground temperature data from thermistor cables were used to calibrate 1D numerical models to estimate future permafrost temperature changes and probable rates of degradation in different environmental settings within the communities and under different climate change scenarios for the 2019-2100 period. Throughout this project, abundant consultations were held in communities and with stakeholders to better understand their concerns and to provide pragmatic recommendations for improving construction methods and land-use planning to face the challenges of permafrost thaw. Specific recommendations were made to the higher levels of government for improving construction practices. Inuit aspirations, culture, and leadership remain essential in integrating permafrost geotechnical knowledge in planning a safe future for the communities.
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C3 Laval University
RP Allard, M (corresponding author), Univ Laval, Ctr Etud Nord, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
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NR 72
TC 4
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 7
PU CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
PI OTTAWA
PA 65 AURIGA DR, SUITE 203, OTTAWA, ON K2E 7W6, CANADA
EI 2368-7460
J9 ARCT SCI
JI Arct. Sci.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 9
IS 3
BP 657
EP 677
DI 10.1139/as-2022-0024
EA APR 2023
PG 21
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences; Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA S5UU1
UT WOS:000997941400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bayrak, MM
   Marks, D
   Hauser, LT
AF Bayrak, Mucahid Mustafa
   Marks, Danny
   Hauser, Leon T.
TI Disentangling the concepts of global climate change, adaptation, and
   human mobility: a political-ecological exploration in Vietnam's Mekong
   Delta
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Political ecology; human mobility; adaptation regimes; Mekong Delta;
   climate change; environmental migration
ID ENVIRONMENTAL REFUGEES; MIGRATION; FLOODS; RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT;
   DYNAMICS; FUTURE; LAND
AB The complex relationship between human mobility and global climate change remains contested. In this viewpoint, the themes of human mobility, adaptation and climate change are explored from a political ecology perspective. A framework of political ecology of human mobility in relation to climate change is applied to the context of Vietnam's Mekong Delta (MKD). The Vietnamese government, popular media and academic studies often present the MKD in dystopian ways in which there is sometimes no more place for poor and landless farmers as a direct result of climate change. In 2019 and 2020, the MKD faced one of its most severe droughts in recent history largely tied to upstream hydropower development. In this viewpoint article, we contend that future studies can no longer establish a direct and causal relationship between climate change and human mobility, especially in light of these recent events. The underlying drivers as well as the broader context, which are shaped by political economy, market structures and forces, power relations, government policy, geopolitics, and transboundary water issues deserve a more prominent role in the analysis of human mobility patterns in the MKD and beyond.
C1 [Bayrak, Mucahid Mustafa] Natl Taiwan Normal Univ, Dept Geog, Rm 922,Cin Bldg,162,Sect 1,Heping E Rd, Taipei 106, Taiwan.
   [Marks, Danny] Dublin City Univ, Sch Law & Govt, Dublin, Ireland.
   [Hauser, Leon T.] Leiden Univ, Inst Environm Sci, Leiden, Netherlands.
C3 National Taiwan Normal University; Dublin City University; Leiden
   University - Excl LUMC; Leiden University
RP Bayrak, MM (corresponding author), Natl Taiwan Normal Univ, Dept Geog, Rm 922,Cin Bldg,162,Sect 1,Heping E Rd, Taipei 106, Taiwan.
EM mmbayrak@ntnu.edu.tw
RI Bayrak, Mucahid/AAF-9935-2021
OI Hauser, Leon T./0000-0003-1408-9942; Marks, Danny/0000-0003-0833-880X
FU Ministry of Science and Technology of Taiwan [MOST 110-2636-H-003-007];
   Utrecht University's Water, Climate and Future Deltas Hub
FX This study was supported by the Ministry of Science and Technology of
   Taiwan (MOST 110-2636-H-003-007) and a seed grant from Utrecht
   University's Water, Climate and Future Deltas Hub (entitled: 'Human
   costs of shrinking deltas: Adaptation pathways of vulnerable groups to
   sea-level rise in three Asian deltas').
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NR 83
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 7
U2 28
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD NOV 26
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 10
BP 935
EP 944
DI 10.1080/17565529.2022.2028596
EA JAN 2022
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6V0SK
UT WOS:000750137800001
OA Green Accepted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mabon, L
AF Mabon, Leslie
TI A historical approach to understanding governance of extreme urban heat
   in Fukuoka, Japan
SO DISASTER PREVENTION AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Fukuoka; Japan; Urban heat; Urban thermal
   environment
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CITIES; CITY
AB Purpose The purpose of this paper is to contribute to emergent understandings in research into urban climate change-related disasters (such as extreme heat), which recognise that present-day actions or failures of cities to address climate risk are rooted in a historical context. Design/methodology/approach The paper analyses content of scientific journals produced by the not-for-profit Kyushu Environmental Evaluation Association in Fukuoka since the 1970s. The aim is to evaluate the shifting understanding and conception of a liveable urban environment within Fukuoka over time and assess how this narrative has informed capability to understand and manage extreme heat as an emergent disaster risk. Findings The strong technical competences enabling Fukuoka to undertake evidence-based management of risks from climate-related disasters today exist at least partially because of earlier environmental concerns within the city and an early emergence of techno-scientific competence within the city's research institutions working at the science-policy interface. Originality/value The findings suggest a need to avoid uncritically exporting "lessons" from apparent urban climate "success stories", without full recognition of the historical context enabling production and utilisation of weather and climate knowledge in specific locations.
C1 [Mabon, Leslie] Scottish Assoc Marine Sci, Oban, Argyll, Scotland.
C3 University of the Highlands & Islands
RP Mabon, L (corresponding author), Scottish Assoc Marine Sci, Oban, Argyll, Scotland.
EM leslie.mabon@sams.ac.uk
RI Mabon, Leslie/JDW-8621-2023
OI Mabon, Leslie/0000-0003-2646-6119
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NR 52
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 12
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 0965-3562
EI 1758-6100
J9 DISASTER PREV MANAG
JI Disaster Prev. Manag.
PD FEB 11
PY 2021
VL 30
IS 1
SI SI
BP 5
EP 21
DI 10.1108/DPM-01-2020-0010
EA SEP 2020
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health;
   Management
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health; Business & Economics
GA QK1IK
UT WOS:000572395900001
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McDonnell, S
AF McDonnell, Siobhan
TI Other Dark Sides of Resilience: Politics and Power in Community-Based
   Efforts to Strengthen Resilience
SO ANTHROPOLOGICAL FORUM
LA English
DT Article
DE Disaster; resilience; vulnerability; Pacific; climate change
ID CLIMATE; VULNERABILITY; LAND
AB Oceanic people and places are increasingly labelled as either 'resilient' or 'vulnerable' to disasters and climate change. Resilience is often described in disaster discourse as a strategy designed to overcome vulnerability by helping communities to 'bounce back' in the wake of 'natural' disasters. Using ethnographic research conducted with Community Disaster and Climate Change Committees (CDCs) in Vanuatu in the wake of Tropical Cyclone Pam, this paper seeks to problematise disaster responses that see the 'community' as a space to be acted upon by outsiders, or where people will respond in a unified way to the challenges of rebuilding after disaster. Using political ecology framings this paper critiques the ideas of resilience that appear entrenched in community-based disaster and climate change adaptation discourse and practice in Oceania. Rather than presupposing resilience or vulnerability, this paper details the dispersal and distribution power and agency amongst individual actors and groups that either supported or manipulated, the distribution of goods by Community Disaster Committees. In this way, it moves beyond the limitations of conceptual framings of resilience in disaster management and climate change into a more considered appraisal of power, by exploring what James Ferguson has termed 'the politics of distribution' in the context of disaster.
C1 [McDonnell, Siobhan] Australian Natl Univ, Crawford Sch Publ Policy, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
C3 Australian National University
RP McDonnell, S (corresponding author), Australian Natl Univ, Crawford Sch Publ Policy, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
EM Siobhan.mcdonnell@anu.edu.au
OI McDonnell, Siobhan/0000-0001-8326-8683
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NR 57
TC 30
Z9 36
U1 2
U2 24
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0066-4677
EI 1469-2902
J9 ANTHROPOL FORUM
JI Anthropol. Forum
PD APR 2
PY 2020
VL 30
IS 1-2
SI SI
BP 55
EP 72
DI 10.1080/00664677.2019.1647828
EA AUG 2019
PG 18
WC Anthropology
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Anthropology
GA ME2CS
UT WOS:000481183000001
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Osei-Kyei, R
   Chan, APC
   Yu, Y
   Chen, C
   Ke, Y
   Tijani, B
AF Osei-Kyei, Robert
   Chan, Albert P. C.
   Yu, Yao
   Chen, Chuan
   Ke, Yongjian
   Tijani, Bashir
TI Social Responsibility Initiatives for Public-Private Partnership
   Projects: A Comparative Study between China and Ghana
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE public-private partnership; social responsibility; sustainability;
   sustainable development; China; Ghana
ID CRITICAL SUCCESS FACTORS; WATER-SUPPLY PROJECTS; HONG-KONG;
   INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT;
   DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; CRITERIA; IMPLEMENTATION; EXPERIENCES; PROCUREMENT
AB Sustainability is a global issue and its enhancement through modern forms of procurements, such as public-private partnership (PPP), has become topical considering the huge impact of PPP activities on society, the economy, and the environment. However, one way of promoting sustainability thorough PPPs is the adoption of social responsibility (SR) initiatives/factors. This paper aims to empirically investigate the SR factors in PPPs through a comparative study between China and Ghana. An empirical questionnaire survey was conducted in both China and Ghana. Further, the mean score ranking, Kendall's coefficient of concordance, and Mann-Whitney U test were used for data analysis. Results show that SR factors related to the economic efficiency of PPP projects and climate change adaptation are critical in China, whereas in Ghana, SR factors directly related to job creation and environmental protection are critical. The outputs of this study inform investors of the critical SR initiatives to consider when engaging in PPPs in Asia and Africa. In addition, they provide a solid knowledge base for the continuous international debate on how sustainability could be enhanced through PPP policy.
C1 [Osei-Kyei, Robert; Tijani, Bashir] Western Sydney Univ, Sch Comp Engn & Math, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia.
   [Chan, Albert P. C.; Yu, Yao] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Bldg & Real Estate, Kowloon, Hong Hum, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Yu, Yao; Chen, Chuan] Sichuan Univ, Business Sch, Chengdu 610065, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
   [Ke, Yongjian] Univ Technol Sydney, Sch Built Environm, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia.
C3 Western Sydney University; Hong Kong Polytechnic University; Sichuan
   University; University of Technology Sydney
RP Chen, C (corresponding author), Sichuan Univ, Business Sch, Chengdu 610065, Sichuan, Peoples R China.
EM R.Osei-Kyei@westernsydney.edu.au; albert.chan@polyu.edu.hk;
   yuyaoscu@126.com; chenchuanscu@126.com; yongjian.ke@uts.edu.au;
   17872544@student.westernsydney.edu.au
RI Osei-Kyei, Robert/IQU-9473-2023; Ke, Yongjian/C-6071-2014; Chan,
   Albert/I-4650-2012
OI Ke, Yongjian/0000-0003-3426-703X; Chan, Albert/0000-0002-4853-6440;
   Tijani, Bashir/0000-0001-8841-2787
FU Hong Kong PhD Fellowship Scheme from the Research Grants Council (RGC)
   of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region; Hong Kong Polytechnic
   University, Hong Kong
FX This research forms part of a research project entitled "A best practice
   framework for PPP implementation for infrastructure development in
   Ghana" from which other papers have been produced with different
   objective/scope but sharing the same background and methodology. The
   research project described is fully supported by the Hong Kong PhD
   Fellowship Scheme from the Research Grants Council (RGC) of the Hong
   Kong Special Administrative Region and The Hong Kong Polytechnic
   University, Hong Kong.
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NR 66
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 40
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
SN 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR 1
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 5
AR 1338
DI 10.3390/su11051338
PG 14
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HQ8GA
UT WOS:000462661000122
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Chen, L
   Zong, JF
   Guo, HT
   Sun, L
   Liu, M
AF Chen, Liang
   Zong, Jianfang
   Guo, Huiting
   Sun, Liang
   Liu, Mei
GP IOP
TI Interpretation of Series National Standards of China on "Greenhouse Gas
   Emissions Accounting and Reporting for Enterprises"
SO 2018 2ND INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP ON RENEWABLE ENERGY AND DEVELOPMENT
   (IWRED 2018)
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 2nd International Workshop on Renewable Energy and Development (IWRED)
CY APR 20-22, 2018
CL Guilin, PEOPLES R CHINA
AB Standardization is playing an increasingly important role in reducing greenhouse gas emission and in climatic change adaptation, especially in the "three" greenhouse gas emission aspects (measurement, report, verification). Standardization has become one of the most important ways in mitigating the global climate change. Standardization Administration of China (SAC) has taken many productive measures in actively promoting standardization work to cope with climate change. In April 2014, SAC officially approved the establishment of "National Carbon Emission Management Standardization Technical Committee" In November 2015, SAC officially issued the first 11 national standards on carbon management including "General Guideline of the Greenhouse Gas Emissions Accounting and Reporting for Industrial Enterprises" and the requirements of the greenhouse gas emissions accounting and reporting in 10 sectors including power generation, power grid, iron and steel, chemical engineering, electrolytic aluminum, magnesium smelting, plate glass, cement, ceramics and civil aviation, which proposes unified requirements of "what to calculate and how to calculate" the greenhouse gas emission for enterprises. This paper focuses on the detailed interpretation of the main contents of the first 11 national standards, so as to provide technical supports for users of the standards and to comprehensively promote the emission reduction of greenhouse gas at the enterprise level.
C1 [Chen, Liang; Zong, Jianfang; Guo, Huiting; Sun, Liang; Liu, Mei] China Natl Inst Standardizat, 4 Zhichun Rd, Beijing, Peoples R China.
C3 China National Institute of Standardization
RP Chen, L (corresponding author), China Natl Inst Standardizat, 4 Zhichun Rd, Beijing, Peoples R China.
EM Chenliang@cnis.gov.cn
FU national science and technology research project "Research and pilot
   application of important standards for greenhouse gas management in
   typical industries such as papermaking and petrochemicals"
   [2016YFF0204401]
FX This paper is funded by national science and technology research project
   "Research and pilot application of important standards for greenhouse
   gas management in typical industries such as papermaking and
   petrochemicals" (2016YFF0204401).
CR [Anonymous], 3215182015 GBT
   [Anonymous], 3215112015 GBT
   [Anonymous], 3215192015 GBT
   [Anonymous], 171672016 GB
   [Anonymous], 4482016 DLT
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   [Anonymous], 250952010 GBT
   GB, GB/T 32151.2-2015
   GB/T 3286.1-2012, 328612012 GBT
NR 17
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 9
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2018
VL 153
AR 062011
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/153/6/062011
PG 9
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Energy & Fuels
GA BL0WH
UT WOS:000446795200221
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lo, AY
   Xu, BX
   Chan, FKS
   Su, RX
AF Lo, Alex Y.
   Xu, Bixia
   Chan, Faith K. S.
   Su, Ruixian
TI Social capital and community preparation for urban flooding in China
SO APPLIED GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Social capital; Community resilience; Climate change adaptation; Risk
   mitigation; Flooding; China
ID RISK PERCEPTION; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; MITIGATION; RESILIENCE;
   VULNERABILITY; PREPAREDNESS; MANAGEMENT; SHANGHAI; DROUGHT
AB Social capital can enhance community resilience to environmental change. Productive and trusted relations among social actors and effectual social norms can help local residents share resources, information and risks. The main objective of our study is to understand the ways in which social attributes and risk considerations influence adoption of resilient economic measures by individuals for reducing potential losses due to catastrophic rainstorm and flooding. This article provides evidence from China on how social capital contributes to anticipatory adaptation to environmental change. The inquiry is based on structured interviews with local residents of Tianjin, a flood-prone port city in China, and a standard regression analysis. Findings show that the intention to make preparation increases with the levels of social expectation, social relationship, and institutional trust. Perceived risk and damage experience, however, have no significant impacts. This suggests that building social capacity and trust will be more effective in enhancing community resilience than merely increasing awareness of hazard risks. We call for greater efforts on strengthening the capacity of formal and informal communal institutions. The structural changes required, however, are challenging. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Lo, Alex Y.] Univ Hong Kong, Kadoorie Inst, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
   [Xu, Bixia] Griffith Univ, Griffith Sch Environm, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Chan, Faith K. S.] Univ Nottingham, Sch Geog Sci, Ningbo, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Su, Ruixian] Tianjin Normal Univ, Sch Urban & Environm Studies, Tianjin, Peoples R China.
C3 University of Hong Kong; Griffith University; University of Nottingham
   Ningbo China; Tianjin Normal University
RP Lo, AY (corresponding author), Univ Hong Kong, TT Tsui Bldg,Pokfulam Rd, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
EM alexloyh@hku.hk
RI Lo, Alex/B-7948-2008; Chan, Faith Ka Shun/H-1541-2017
OI Lo, Alex/0000-0002-5953-4176; Chan, Faith Ka Shun/0000-0001-6091-6596
FU Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia under Australia-China
   Joint-action Program; Griffith Climate Change Response Program at
   Griffith University
FX This research was funded by the Academy of the Social Sciences in
   Australia under the Australia-China Joint-action Program and the
   Griffith Climate Change Response Program at Griffith University. The
   authors appreciate the research assistance provided by students at the
   Tianjin Normal University.
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NR 51
TC 56
Z9 61
U1 7
U2 104
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0143-6228
EI 1873-7730
J9 APPL GEOGR
JI Appl. Geogr.
PD OCT
PY 2015
VL 64
BP 1
EP 11
DI 10.1016/j.apgeog.2015.08.003
PG 11
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA CY2FU
UT WOS:000366225000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU McCright, AM
   Dunlap, RE
   Xiao, CY
AF McCright, Aaron M.
   Dunlap, Riley E.
   Xiao, Chenyang
TI The impacts of temperature anomalies and political orientation on
   perceived winter warming
SO NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; SCIENTIFIC AGREEMENT; GOVERNMENT ACTION; LOCAL WEATHER;
   PERCEPTIONS; SUPPORT; POLICY; EXPERIENCE
AB Although perceptions of common weather phenomena moderately align with instrumental measurements of such phenomena(1), the evidence that weather or climatic conditions influence beliefs about anthropogenic climate change is mixed(2-13). This study addresses both foci, which are important to scholars who investigate human-environment interactions and observers who expect greater exposure to weather or climate extremes to translate into stronger support for climate change adaptive measures and mitigative policies. We analyse the extent to which state-level winter temperature anomalies influence the likelihood of perceiving local winter temperatures to be warmer than usual and attributing these warmer temperatures mainly to global warming. We show that actual temperature anomalies influence perceived warming but not attribution of such warmer-than-usual winter temperatures to global warming. Rather, the latter is influenced more by perceived scientific agreement; beliefs about the current onset, human cause, threat and seriousness of global warming; and political orientation. This is not surprising given the politicization of climate science(14,15) and political polarization on climate change beliefs(16,17) in recent years. These results suggest that personal experience with weather or climate variability may help cultivate support for adaptive measures, but it may not increase support for mitigation policies.
C1 [McCright, Aaron M.] Michigan State Univ, Lyman Briggs Coll, Dept Sociol, E Lansing, MI 48825 USA.
   [McCright, Aaron M.] Michigan State Univ, Environm Sci & Policy Program, E Lansing, MI 48825 USA.
   [Dunlap, Riley E.] Oklahoma State Univ, Dept Sociol, Stillwater, OK 74078 USA.
   [Xiao, Chenyang] Amer Univ, Dept Sociol, Washington, DC 20016 USA.
C3 Michigan State University; Michigan State University; Oklahoma State
   University System; Oklahoma State University - Stillwater; American
   University
RP McCright, AM (corresponding author), Michigan State Univ, Lyman Briggs Coll, Dept Sociol, 919 East Shaw Lane,Room E-35, E Lansing, MI 48825 USA.
EM mccright@msu.edu
RI Dunlap, Riley/Z-1676-2019; Xiao, Chenyang/J-9033-2019; McCright,
   Aaron/Z-1967-2019
OI Xiao, Chenyang/0000-0002-5946-0584
FU Office Of The Director; Office of Integrative Activities [1301789]
   Funding Source: National Science Foundation
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NR 33
TC 79
Z9 90
U1 4
U2 45
PU NATURE RESEARCH
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 1758-678X
EI 1758-6798
J9 NAT CLIM CHANGE
JI Nat. Clim. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2014
VL 4
IS 12
BP 1077
EP 1081
DI 10.1038/NCLIMATE2443
PG 5
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA AU4ZT
UT WOS:000345617500015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Brooks, S
AF Brooks, Sally
TI Enabling adaptation? Lessons from the new 'Green Revolution' in Malawi
   and Kenya
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID AGRICULTURAL INPUT SUBSIDY; POLITICAL-ECONOMY; INNOVATION; SYSTEMS;
   FOOD; STRATEGY; AFRICA; SEED
AB This article explores the extent to which efforts to improve productivity of smallholder agriculture through a new 'Green Revolution' in Sub Saharan Africa are likely to enhance the capacity of smallholder farmers to adapt to the impacts of climate change. Drawing on empirical material from Malawi and Kenya, the paper finds more conflicts than synergies between the pursuit of higher productivity through the promotion of hybrid maize adoption and crop diversification as a strategy for climate change adaptation. This is despite an oft-assumed causal link between escape from the 'low maize productivity trap' and progression towards crop diversification as an adaptive strategy. In both countries, a convergence of interests between governments, donors and seed companies, combined with a historical preference for, and dependence on maize as the primary staple, has led to a narrowing of options for smallholder farmers, undermining the development of adaptive capacities in the longer term. This dynamic is linked to the conflation of market-based variety of agricultural technologies, as viewed 'from the top down', with diversity-in-context, as represented by site-specific and locally derived and adapted technologies and institutions that can only be developed 'from the bottom up'.
C1 Univ York, York YO10 5DD, N Yorkshire, England.
C3 University of York - UK
RP Brooks, S (corresponding author), Univ York, York YO10 5DD, N Yorkshire, England.
EM sally.brooks@york.ac.uk
RI Brooks, Sally/HTO-3725-2023
OI Brooks, Sally/0000-0002-1005-1245
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NR 43
TC 14
Z9 21
U1 1
U2 54
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD JAN
PY 2014
VL 122
IS 1-2
BP 15
EP 26
DI 10.1007/s10584-013-0992-0
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 274RD
UT WOS:000328622900003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vogel, C
AF Vogel, Coleen
TI Business and climate change: Initial explorations in South Africa
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; business sector; climate change; opportunities; risk
   management
AB Climate change is one of a complex array of risks facing the planet and society. It is argued that adaptation to and mitigation of climate change will be required to avert or reduce adverse impacts. Governments are developing climate change adaptation (CCA) strategies. The business community is also stirring to the need to adapt to as well as mitigate climate change, but progress has been slow, particularly in the case of adaptation. This paper explores emerging perceptions of the need for adaptation and some initial adaptation actions within a 'business as usual' economic mode of operation. It also identifies constraints to further action among a cross-section of actors in the business community in South Africa. Data from semi-structured interviews and scrutiny of reports reveals that there are a number of constraints preventing business from engaging more fully in CCA. These findings correspond with findings in other business-sector and CCA studies. They include: issues of terminology (adaptation versus risk management); uncertainty over climate-change projections and scenarios; and concerns about how such information can be used effectively in decision making, particularly long-term business planning. Despite these challenges, some potential synergies between policy, planning and the business community for promoting adaptation are suggested.
C1 Univ Witwatersrand, Revamp Res Grp, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
C3 University of Witwatersrand
RP Vogel, C (corresponding author), Univ Witwatersrand, Revamp Res Grp, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM coleen.vogel@wits.ac.za
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NR 48
TC 10
Z9 11
U1 0
U2 22
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD MAR 1
PY 2009
VL 1
IS 1
BP 82
EP 97
DI 10.3763/cdev.2009.0007
PG 16
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA V27YZ
UT WOS:000208649800008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lorenzoni, I
   Jones, M
   Turnpenny, JR
AF Lorenzoni, Irene
   Jones, Mavis
   Turnpenny, John R.
TI Climate change, human genetics, and post-normality in the UK
SO FUTURES
LA English
DT Article
ID NORMAL SCIENCE; POSTNORMAL SCIENCE; POLICY; BOUNDARY; GOVERNANCE;
   POLITICS; LIFE
AB Virtually intractable matters characterized by uncertainty over consequences, diverse and multiple engaged interests, conflicting knowledge claims, and high stakes, call for post-normal policy responses. This paper explores how two such responses have been implemented in the UK through the management of specific aspects of anthropogenic climate change and human genetics, which we argue can be described as "wicked" or post-normal issues. To address these, approaches require that a broader range of epistemic positions and worldviews be recognized as valid in the policy development process. We suggest that the concept of boundary organisations is well suited to examine some of the institutions that have been set up in the UK to deal with the two post-normal issues we consider here. This paper explores the extent to which the UK Climate Impacts Programme and the Human Genetics Commission respond to a post-normal policy approach and their achievements in overcoming epistemological boundaries and effecting integrated management responses. We conclude by considering the insights such an analysis offers into operationalising post-normal policy approaches. As intermediaries and facilitators, we suggest the two organisations can be considered forerunners in applying a post-normal approach to climate change adaptation and human genetics, respectively. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 Univ E Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Zuckerman Inst Connect Environm Res, Ctr Environm Risk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   Univ E Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Zuckerman Inst Connect Environm Res, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
C3 University of East Anglia; University of East Anglia
RP Lorenzoni, I (corresponding author), Univ E Anglia, Sch Environm Sci, Zuckerman Inst Connect Environm Res, Ctr Environm Risk, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
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NR 63
TC 56
Z9 61
U1 0
U2 12
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0016-3287
J9 FUTURES
JI Futures
PD FEB
PY 2007
VL 39
IS 1
BP 65
EP 82
DI 10.1016/j.futures.2006.03.005
PG 18
WC Economics; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Public Administration
GA 127RN
UT WOS:000243604100005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cousins, JJ
AF Cousins, Joshua J.
TI Just nature-based solutions and the pursuit of climate resilient urban
   development
SO LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate resilient development; Nature -based solutions; Climate justice;
   Urban resilience; Co -production; Transformation
ID POLITICAL ECOLOGY; GREEN SPACE; JUSTICE; SUSTAINABILITY; GOVERNANCE;
   INFRASTRUCTURE; TRANSFORMATION; COPRODUCTION; RECOGNITION; CHALLENGES
AB Nature -based solutions (NbS) offer pathways towards climate resilient development. For cities, these pathways translate to a host of benefits to address the climate crisis, including climate change adaptation and mitigation, biodiversity protection and enhancement, and human well-being. In urban spaces, NbS are also about the design and re -design of the urban built and natural environment. This presents a need to create the institutions and governance mechanisms that allow for the co -production and co -design of NbS alongside local communities in ways that serve to address justice and legacies of inequality. In this perspective, I examine three areas of focus to deliver just nature -based solutions: problem , process , and progress . Problem focuses on the types of relationships nature -based solutions seek to transform -the race and class -based inequalities embedded in urban form. Process addresses how nature -based solutions can deliver justice through design and co -production. Finally, progress is about developing indicators and measuring progress towards achieving just nature -based solutions and how they reflect diverse and pluralistic value systems. Collectively these should move just NbS towards the repair of social and ecological exploitation in and beyond the city.
C1 [Cousins, Joshua J.] SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Dept Environm Studies, 106 Marshall Hall, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA.
C3 State University of New York (SUNY) System; State University of New York
   (SUNY) College of Environmental Science & Forestry
RP Cousins, JJ (corresponding author), SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Dept Environm Studies, 106 Marshall Hall, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA.
EM jcousins@esf.edu
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NR 108
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 51
U2 59
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0169-2046
EI 1872-6062
J9 LANDSCAPE URBAN PLAN
JI Landsc. Urban Plan.
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 247
AR 105054
DI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2024.105054
EA MAR 2024
PG 7
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies; Geography; Geography, Physical; Regional
   & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Physical Geography; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA QD9G1
UT WOS:001219052100001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rockloev, J
   Semenza, JC
   Dasgupta, S
   Robinson, EZ
   Abd El Wahed, A
   Alcayna, T
   Arnés-Sanz, C
   Bailey, M
   Bärnighausen, T
   Bartumeus, F
   Borrell, C
   Bouwer, LM
   Bretonnière, PA
   Bunker, A
   Chavardes, C
   van Daalen, KR
   Encarnaçao, J
   González-Reviriego, N
   Guo, JW
   Johnson, K
   Koopmans, MPG
   Costa, MM
   Michaelakis, A
   Montalvo, T
   Omazic, A
   Palmer, JRB
   Preet, R
   Romanello, M
   Alam, MS
   Sikkema, RS
   Terrado, M
   Treskova, M
   Lowe, R
AF Rockloev, Joacim
   Semenza, Jan C.
   Dasgupta, Shouro
   Robinson, ElizabethJ. Z.
   Abd El Wahed, Ahmed
   Alcayna, Tilly
   Arnes-Sanz, Cristina
   Bailey, Meghan
   Baernighausen, Till
   Bartumeus, Frederic
   Borrell, Carme
   Bouwer, Laurens M.
   Bretonniere, Pierre-Antoine
   Bunker, Aditi
   Chavardes, Chloe
   van Daalen, Kim R.
   Encarnacao, Joao
   Gonzalez-Reviriego, Nube
   Guo, Junwen
   Johnson, Katie
   Koopmans, Marion P. G.
   Costa, Maria Manez
   Michaelakis, Antonios
   Montalvo, Tomas
   Omazic, Anna
   Palmer, John R. B.
   Preet, Raman
   Romanello, Marina
   Alam, Mohammad Shafiul
   Sikkema, Reina S.
   Terrado, Marta
   Treskova, Marina
   Lowe, Rachel
CA IDAlert Consortium
   Urquiza, D
TI Decision-support tools to build climate resilience against emerging
   infectious diseases in Europe and beyond
SO LANCET REGIONAL HEALTH-EUROPE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Infectious disease; One Health; Planetary health; Human
   health; Climate policy; Co-production; Adaptation; Mitigation
ID BIRD MIGRATION; ONE HEALTH; DETERMINANTS; CIRCULATION; NETHERLANDS;
   FRAMEWORK; BENEFITS; SCIENCE; IMPACT; WORLD
AB Climate change is one of several drivers of recurrent outbreaks and geographical range expansion of infectious diseases in Europe. We propose a framework for the co-production of policy-relevant indicators and decision support tools that track past, present, and future climate-induced disease risks across hazard, exposure, and vulnerability domains at the animal, human, and environmental interface. This entails the co-development of early warning and response systems and tools to assess the costs and benefits of climate change adaptation and mitigation measures across sectors, to increase health system resilience at regional and local levels and reveal novel policy entry points and opportunities. Our approach involves multi-level engagement, innovative methodologies, and novel data streams. We take advantage of intelligence generated locally and empirically to quantify effects in areas experiencing rapid urban transformation and heterogeneous climate-induced disease threats. Our goal is to reduce the knowledge-to-action gap by developing an integrated One Health-Climate Risk framework. Copyright & COPY; 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
C1 [Rockloev, Joacim; Semenza, Jan C.; Arnes-Sanz, Cristina; Treskova, Marina] Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Inst Global Hlth HIGH, Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Rockloev, Joacim; Semenza, Jan C.; Arnes-Sanz, Cristina; Treskova, Marina] Heidelberg Univ, Interdisciplinary Ctr Sci Comp IWR, Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Rockloev, Joacim; Semenza, Jan C.; Guo, Junwen; Preet, Raman] Umea Univ, Dept Publ Hlth & Clin Med, Umea, Sweden.
   [Dasgupta, Shouro; Johnson, Katie] Ctr Euro Mediterraneo Cambiamenti Climat CMCC, I-30175 Venice, Italy.
   [Dasgupta, Shouro; Robinson, ElizabethJ. Z.] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci LSE, Graham Res Inst Climate Change & Environm, London, England.
   [Abd El Wahed, Ahmed] Univ Leipzig, Inst Anim Hyg & Vet Publ Hlth, Fac Vet Med, Leipzig, Germany.
   [Alcayna, Tilly; Bailey, Meghan] Red Cross Red Crescent Ctr Climate Change & Disas, The Hague, Netherlands.
   [Alcayna, Tilly; Lowe, Rachel] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med LSHTM, Ctr Climate Change & Planetary Hlth, London, England.
   [Alcayna, Tilly; Lowe, Rachel] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med LSHTM, Ctr Math Modelling Infect Dis, London, England.
   [Alcayna, Tilly] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med LSHTM, Hlth Humanitarian Crises Ctr, London, England.
   [Baernighausen, Till; Bunker, Aditi] Heidelberg Univ, Heidelberg Univ Hosp, Heidelberg Inst Global Hlth, Heidelberg, Germany.
   [Baernighausen, Till] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Global Hlth & Populat, Boston, MA USA.
   [Bartumeus, Frederic] Ctr Estudis Avancats Blanes CEAB CSIC, Theoret & Computat Ecol Grp, Blanes, Spain.
   [Bartumeus, Frederic; Lowe, Rachel] Inst Catalana Recerca & Estudis Avancats ICREA, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Bartumeus, Frederic] Ctr Recerca Ecol & Aplicac Forestals CREAF, Barcelona 08193, Spain.
   [Borrell, Carme] Agencia Salut Publ Barcelona ASPB, Pest Surveillance & Control, Barcelona 08023, Spain.
   [Borrell, Carme] Biomed Res Ctr Network Epidemiol & Publ Hlth CIBE, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Bouwer, Laurens M.; Costa, Maria Manez] Helmholtz Zentrum Hereon, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, Hamburg, Germany.
   [Bretonniere, Pierre-Antoine; van Daalen, Kim R.; Gonzalez-Reviriego, Nube; Terrado, Marta; Lowe, Rachel; Urquiza, D] Barcelona Supercomp Ctr BSC, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Bunker, Aditi] Harvard TH Chan Sch Publ Hlth, Ctr Climate Hlth & Global Environm, Boston, MA USA.
   [Chavardes, Chloe] Three Oclock, Paris, France.
   [van Daalen, Kim R.] Univ Cambridge, British Heart Fdn Cardiovasc Epidemiol Unit, Dept Publ Hlth & Primary Care, Cambridge, England.
   [van Daalen, Kim R.] Univ Cambridge, Heart & Lung Res Inst, Cambridge, England.
   [Encarnacao, Joao] Irideon, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Koopmans, Marion P. G.; Sikkema, Reina S.] Univ Med Ctr, Erasmus Med Ctr, Dept Virosci, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
   [Michaelakis, Antonios] Benaki Phytopathol Inst, Lab Insects & Parasites Med Importance, Attica, Greece.
   [Montalvo, Tomas] Agencia Salut Publ Barcelona ASPB, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Montalvo, Tomas] CIBER Epidemiol & Salud Publ CIBERESP, Madrid, Spain.
   [Montalvo, Tomas] Inst Invest Biomed St Pau IIB ST PAU, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Omazic, Anna] Natl Vet Inst SVA, Dept Chem Environm & Feed Hyg, Uppsala, Sweden.
   [Palmer, John R. B.] Univ Pompeu Fabra UPF, Dept Polit & Social Sci, Barcelona, Spain.
   [Romanello, Marina] Univ Coll London UCL, Inst Global Hlth, London, England.
   [Alam, Mohammad Shafiul] Int Ctr Diarrhoeal Dis Res Bangladesh Icddr B, Infect Dis Div, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Rockloev, Joacim] Umea Univ, Dept Publ Hlth & Clin Med, Sect Sustainable Hlth, S-90187 Umea, Sweden.
C3 Ruprecht Karls University Heidelberg; Ruprecht Karls University
   Heidelberg; Umea University; Centro Euro-Mediterraneo sui Cambiamenti
   Climatici (CMCC); University of London; London School Economics &
   Political Science; Leipzig University; University of London; London
   School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; University of London; London
   School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; University of London; London
   School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; Ruprecht Karls University
   Heidelberg; Harvard University; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public
   Health; Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC); CSIC -
   Centre d'Estudis Avancats de Blanes (CEAB); ICREA; Centro de
   Investigacion Ecologica y Aplicaciones Forestales (CREAF-CERCA); Public
   Health Agency of Barcelona; Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz-Zentrum
   Hereon; Universitat Politecnica de Catalunya; Barcelona Supercomputer
   Center (BSC-CNS); Harvard University; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public
   Health; University of Cambridge; University of Cambridge; Erasmus
   University Rotterdam; Erasmus MC; Public Health Agency of Barcelona;
   CIBER - Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red; CIBERESP; National
   Veterinary Institute SVA; Pompeu Fabra University; University of London;
   University College London; International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease
   Research (ICDDR); Umea University
RP Rockloev, J (corresponding author), Umea Univ, Dept Publ Hlth & Clin Med, Sect Sustainable Hlth, S-90187 Umea, Sweden.
EM joacim.rockloev@uni-heidelberg.de
RI Lowe, Rachel/H-1658-2015; Koopmans, Marion/Y-9170-2019; Dasgupta,
   Shouro/ABE-7831-2020; Bartumeus, Frederic/D-1911-2010; Bouwer,
   Laurens/AAV-7628-2021; Alam, Mohammad/C-2285-2011; Johnson,
   Katie/AHA-9459-2022; Costa, Maria/P-1225-2017; Palmer, John
   R.B./N-8620-2014
OI Arnes-Sanz, Cristina/0000-0001-8099-9683; Robinson,
   Elizabeth/0000-0002-4950-0183; Bunker, Aditi/0000-0001-5906-156X;
   Rocklov, Joacim/0000-0003-4030-0449; Alam, Mohammad
   Shafiul/0000-0001-8330-5499; Widgren, Stefan/0000-0001-5745-2284;
   Omazic, Anna/0000-0002-6116-3968; Ceruti, Arianna/0009-0002-3219-8691;
   Guo, Junwen/0000-0003-3724-4810; Singh, Pratik/0009-0004-8657-5004;
   Wubbelmann, Thea/0000-0002-3333-7385; Palmer, John
   R.B./0000-0002-2648-7860; Dekramanjian, Berj/0000-0001-9672-422X;
   Martinez-Urtaza, Jaime/0000-0001-6219-0418; JOHNSON, Katie
   Susan/0000-0002-8369-8234; Dasgupta, Shouro/0000-0003-4080-8066;
   Abourashed, Ayat/0000-0002-0438-1600; van Daalen,
   Kim/0000-0001-6955-9708; Sikkema, Reina/0000-0001-7331-6274; Montalvo
   Porro, Tomas/0000-0002-9060-3205; Preet, Raman Kaur/0000-0002-4371-5941
FU Horizon Europe program through the project IDAlert; UK Research and
   Innovation project [101057554];  [10056533]; Horizon Europe - Pillar II
   [101057554] Funding Source: Horizon Europe - Pillar II
FX This work is funded within the framework of the Horizon Europe program
   through the project IDAlert (https://idalertproject.eu) with grant no.
   101057554 and UK Research and Innovation project refererence no.
   10056533. IDAlert is part of the EU climate change and health cluster
   (https://climate-health.eu) .
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NR 77
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 1
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2666-7762
J9 LANCET REG HEALTH-EU
JI Lancet Reg. Health-Eur.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 32
AR 100701
DI 10.1016/j.lanepe.2023.100701
EA AUG 2023
PG 11
WC Health Care Sciences & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Health Care Sciences & Services; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA S7DA1
UT WOS:001072724100001
PM 37583927
OA gold, Green Published, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Murdoch, LC
   Germanovich, LN
   Slack, WW
   Carbajales-Dale, M
   Knight, D
   Moak, R
   Laffaille, C
   DeWolf, S
   Roudini, S
AF Murdoch, Lawrence C.
   Germanovich, Leonid N.
   Slack, William W.
   Carbajales-Dale, Michael
   Knight, Douglas
   Moak, Robert
   Laffaille, Clemence
   DeWolf, Scott
   Roudini, Soheil
TI Shallow Geologic Storage of Carbon to Remove Atmospheric CO<sub>2</sub>
   and Reduce Flood Risk
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE carbon removal; geologic storage; climate changemitigation; climate
   change adaptation; negativeemission technology; flood protection; sea
   levelrise; global warming
ID HYDRAULIC FRACTURES; ARCHAEOLOGICAL WOOD; DECOMPOSITION; FORMS;
   LANDFILLS; SOFTWOOD; HARDWOOD; DEPTH; DECAY; AREA
AB Geologic carbon storage currently implies that CO2 isinjected into reservoirs more than 1 km deep, but this concept ofgeologic storage can be expanded to include the injection of solid,carbon-bearing particles into geologic formations that are one totwo orders of magnitude shallower than conventional storage reservoirs.Wood is half carbon, available in large quantities at a modest cost,and can be milled into particles and injected as a slurry. We demonstratethe feasibility of shallow geologic storage of carbon by a field experiment,and the injection process also raises the ground surface. The resultingCO(2) storage and ground uplift rates upscale to a techniquethat could contribute to the mitigation of climate change by storingcarbon as well as helping to adapt to flooding risks by elevatingthe ground surface above flood levels. A life-cycle assessment indicatesthat CO2 emissions caused by shallow geologic storage ofcarbon are a small fraction of the injected carbon.
   This project demonstrates that injectingsolid particlesof biomass can store carbon and raise the ground surface at ratesthat would reduce atmospheric CO2 and help adapt to floodingcaused by climate change.
C1 [Murdoch, Lawrence C.; Germanovich, Leonid N.; Carbajales-Dale, Michael; Moak, Robert; Laffaille, Clemence; DeWolf, Scott; Roudini, Soheil] Clemson Univ, Environm Engn & Earth Sci Dept, Clemson, SC 29625 USA.
   [Murdoch, Lawrence C.; Slack, William W.; Knight, Douglas] FRx Inc, Cincinnati, OH 45249 USA.
C3 Clemson University
RP Murdoch, LC (corresponding author), Clemson Univ, Environm Engn & Earth Sci Dept, Clemson, SC 29625 USA.; Murdoch, LC (corresponding author), FRx Inc, Cincinnati, OH 45249 USA.
EM lmurdoc@clemson.edu
RI Carbajales-Dale, Michael/I-7914-2015; Carbajales-Dale,
   Michael/G-1308-2013
OI Roudini, Soheil/0000-0002-2256-1808; Carbajales-Dale,
   Michael/0000-0002-1568-384X; DeWolf, Scott/0000-0002-7440-6973
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NR 74
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 3
U2 25
PU AMER CHEMICAL SOC
PI WASHINGTON
PA 1155 16TH ST, NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20036 USA
SN 0013-936X
EI 1520-5851
J9 ENVIRON SCI TECHNOL
JI Environ. Sci. Technol.
PD JUN 2
PY 2023
VL 57
IS 23
BP 8536
EP 8547
DI 10.1021/acs.est.3c00600
EA JUN 2023
PG 12
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA I7TJ1
UT WOS:001008225900001
PM 37264616
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Acharki, S
   Taia, S
   Arjdal, Y
   Hack, J
AF Acharki, Siham
   Taia, Soufiane
   Arjdal, Youssef
   Hack, Jochen
TI Hydrological modeling of spatial and temporal variations in streamflow
   due to multiple climate change scenarios in northwestern Morocco
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Sentinel-2; SWAT model; Streamflow; CMIP6
ID WATER-RESOURCES; BIAS CORRECTION; SWAT MODEL; IMPACT; SIMULATIONS;
   SYSTEM; AREA; AVAILABILITY; CALIBRATION; ACCURACY
AB Climate change is one of the most important factors impacting hydrological regimes. In this paper, climate change impact on streamflow of Loukkos basin (northwestern Morocco) is evaluated using SWAT model for three future periods: near (2021-2040), mid (2041-2070), and far (2071-2100), compared to baseline 1981-2020. A set of bias-corrected climate models was used: five regional climate models (EURO-CORDEX), four global climate models (CMIP6) and their ensemble mean, under two representative concentration pathways respectively (RCP 4.5; RCP 8.5) and (SSP2-4.5; SSP5-8.5). Furthermore, SUFI-2 algorithm in SWAT-CUP was performed to calibrate (1981-1997), validate (1998-2015), and analyze uncertainty for each dataset at ten hydrological stations. In most stations, statistical performance indicated a good simulation, with a Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE) greater than 0.77 and percent bias (PBIAS) within +/- 10% on a monthly basis. Overall, 82% of models indicated that future climate could decline streamflow. The largest decrease would be for 2071-2100 and under RCP 8.5/SSP5-8.5. Our findings could help planners and policymakers in developing reasonable water management policies and climate change adaptation measures.
C1 [Acharki, Siham] Abdelmalek Essaadi Univ, Fac Sci & Technol Tangier FSTT, Dept Earth Sci, Tetouan 93000, Morocco.
   [Taia, Soufiane; Arjdal, Youssef] Ibn Tofail Univ, Fac Sci, Earth Sci Dept, Nat Resources & Sustainable Dev Lab, Kenitra 14000, Morocco.
   [Hack, Jochen] Leibniz Univ Hannover, Inst Environm Planning, D-30419 Hannover, Germany.
C3 Abdelmalek Essaadi University of Tetouan; Ibn Tofail University of
   Kenitra; Leibniz University Hannover
RP Hack, J (corresponding author), Leibniz Univ Hannover, Inst Environm Planning, D-30419 Hannover, Germany.
EM hack@umwelt.uni-hannover.de
RI Taia, Soufiane/LHA-1303-2024; Arjdal, Youssef/ABE-5339-2021; Acharki,
   Siham/HJH-0977-2022; Hack, Jochen/H-8416-2019
OI Arjdal, Youssef/0000-0002-6954-073X; Acharki, Siham/0000-0001-9421-0807;
   TAIA, SOUFIANE/0000-0002-3886-095X; Hack, Jochen/0000-0002-8060-7990
FU Open Access Publishing Fund of Leibniz University Hannover
FX The publication of this article was funded by the Open Access Publishing
   Fund of Leibniz University Hannover. The authors would like to express
   their deepest gratitude to Dr. Daniela Jacob (Editor -in -Chief) and the
   reviewers for their valuable comments on the manuscript. We thank also
   Abdeslam Acharki for accompanying us on field trips. Thank you to
   Loukkos Hydraulic Basin Agency and Loukkos Regional Agri- cultural
   Development Office for providing us with meteorological and hydrological
   data -sets. We also acknowledge the Earth System Grid Federation (ESGF)
   and its sponsors for storing and giving total access to Euro-CORDEX and
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NR 118
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 12
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD APR
PY 2023
VL 30
AR 100388
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2023.100388
EA MAY 2023
PG 22
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA I3DJ5
UT WOS:001001616500001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rivers-Moore, NA
   Dallas, HF
AF Rivers-Moore, Nicholas A.
   Dallas, Helen F.
TI A spatial freshwater thermal resilience landscape for informing
   conservation planning and climate change adaptation strategies
SO AQUATIC CONSERVATION-MARINE AND FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE catchment transformation; climate change; cost layer; flow
   predictability; groundwater depth; stream order; surrogates;
   temperature; water yield
ID COMMUNITY STRUCTURE; TEMPERATURE; RIVER; PREDICTABILITY; PATTERNS;
   IMPACTS; REGIMES; MODEL
AB Identifying thermal resilience hotspots in freshwater systems enables targeted conservation action, and defining relative ecosystem resilience is important for evaluating the potential consequences of climate change for aquatic ecosystems. The thermal resilience of a river is likely to be affected by variables such as stream order, groundwater depth, flow predictability, water yield (precipitation minus evaporation) and catchment transformation. A database of values for these variables indicating resilience against thermal stress was developed for all sub-catchments in South Africa. Radar plots show the relative importance of the five variables potentially affecting system resilience. The resilience scores (from 0 to 1) for each variable were summed to generate a total resilience score for each sub-catchment and used to generate a map of system resilience to thermal stress for South Africa. This was extended to show hotspots in South Africa where river systems were most likely to show high resilience. These areas, in association with other criteria such as conservation value, provide an additional metric for prioritizing freshwater focal areas for restoration and conservation intervention, and identifying climate change refugia.
C1 [Rivers-Moore, Nicholas A.; Dallas, Helen F.] Freshwater Res Ctr, Scarborough, South Africa.
   [Rivers-Moore, Nicholas A.] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Ctr Water Resources Res, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
   [Dallas, Helen F.] Nelson Mandela Univ, Fac Sci, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
C3 University of Kwazulu Natal; Nelson Mandela University
RP Rivers-Moore, NA (corresponding author), Freshwater Res Ctr, Scarborough, South Africa.; Rivers-Moore, NA (corresponding author), Univ KwaZulu Natal, Ctr Water Resources Res, Pietermaritzburg, South Africa.
EM blackfly1@vodamail.co.za
RI Dallas, Helen/AAB-4983-2021
OI Rivers-Moore, Nicholas/0000-0002-6546-4215; Dallas,
   Helen/0000-0001-8133-3365
FU Water Research Commission [K5/2537]
FX Water Research Commission, Grant/Award Number: K5/2537
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NR 53
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 1
U2 14
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1052-7613
EI 1099-0755
J9 AQUAT CONSERV
JI Aquat. Conserv.-Mar. Freshw. Ecosyst.
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 32
IS 5
BP 832
EP 842
DI 10.1002/aqc.3812
EA MAR 2022
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology; Water
   Resources
GA 1H8GS
UT WOS:000773145400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zalac, H
   Herman, G
   Lisjak, M
   Teklic, T
   Ivezic, V
AF Zalac, H.
   Herman, G.
   Lisjak, M.
   Teklic, T.
   Ivezic, V
TI Intercropping in Walnut Orchards - Assessing the Toxicity of Walnut Leaf
   Litter on Barley and Maize Germination and Seedlings Growth
SO POLJOPRIVREDA
LA English
DT Article
DE intercropping; allelopathy; walnut; barley; maize
ID SOYBEAN GLYCINE-MAX; ZEA-MAYS L.; JUGLONE; JUGLANS; ALLELOPATHY; FORESTS
AB Intercropping arable crops between tree rows has proven to be a great alternative to conventional agriculture in terms of food production sustainability and climate change adaptation. However, close interactions between species in these systems sometimes yield adverse allelopathic effects. In this study, the possibility of intercropping barley and maize in the walnut orchard was investigated in terms of walnut leaf litter toxicity. Leaves from 15 and 30 years old walnut trees were used to prepare water extracts out of freshly fallen leaves and soil with leaves decomposed within. Barley and maize seeds were germinated in these extracts using between paper towels method. Fresh leaf litter extracts slightly reduced barley germination but significantly inhibited both barley and maize seedlings' growth. The extract from older walnut tree leaves had the most severe toxic effect, and seedlings shoot was more sensitive than root for both species. A significant correlation was observed between extracts pH and seedlings lengths, suggesting the hydrogen-induced injury to the root, which consequently influenced growth. Decomposed leaf litter extract had a promotional effect on barley and maize germination and growth, which shows that appropriate walnut litter management could improve the performance of intercropped walnut systems.
C1 [Zalac, H.; Herman, G.; Lisjak, M.; Teklic, T.; Ivezic, V] Josip Juraj Strossmayer Univ Osijek, Fac Agrobiotech Sci Osijek, Wadimfra Preloga 1, Osijek 31000, Croatia.
C3 University of JJ Strossmayer Osijek
RP Zalac, H (corresponding author), Josip Juraj Strossmayer Univ Osijek, Fac Agrobiotech Sci Osijek, Wadimfra Preloga 1, Osijek 31000, Croatia.
EM hzalac@fazos.hr
RI Ivezić, Vladimir/AAQ-8021-2020; Teklić, Tihana/N-1279-2019
OI Lisjak, Miroslav/0000-0002-2526-2010; Teklic, Tihana/0000-0001-8452-3965
FU Croatian Science Foundation project entitled Intercropping of Wood
   Species and Agricultural Crops as an Innovative Approach in
   Agroecosystems [7103]
FX This study is funded by the Croatian Science Foundation project entitled
   Intercropping of Wood Species and Agricultural Crops as an Innovative
   Approach in Agroecosystems (7103) .
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NR 25
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 4
U2 26
PU FAC AGRICULTURE OSIJEK
PI OSIJEK
PA TRG SV TROJSTVA 3, OSIJEK, 31000, CROATIA
SN 1330-7142
EI 1848-8080
J9 POLJOPRIVREDA
JI Poljoprivreda
PY 2022
VL 28
IS 1
BP 46
EP 52
DI 10.18047/poljo.28.1.7
PG 8
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Agriculture
GA 3B3EW
UT WOS:000827828100008
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lancker, K
   Deppenmeier, AL
   Demissie, T
   Schmidt, JO
AF Lancker, Kira
   Deppenmeier, Anna-Lena
   Demissie, Teferi
   Schmidt, Joern O.
TI Climate change adaptation and the role of fuel subsidies: An empirical
   bio-economic modeling study for an artisanal open-access fishery
SO PLOS ONE
LA English
DT Article
ID SMALL PELAGIC FISH; NORTH-WEST AFRICA; SARDINELLA SARDINELLA-AURITA;
   CHANGE IMPACTS; POPULATION; FOOD; EXTINCTION; ECOSYSTEMS; ABUNDANCE;
   RESPONSES
AB Climate change can severely impact artisanal fisheries and affect the role they play in food security. We study climate change effects on the triple bottom line of ecological productivity, fishers' incomes, and fish consumption for an artisanal open-access fishery. We develop and apply an empirical, stochastic bio-economic model for the Senegalese artisanal purse seine fishery on small pelagic fish and compare the simulated fishery's development using four climate projections and two policy scenarios. We find that economic processes of adaptation may amplify the effects of climate variations. The regions' catch potential increases with climate change, induced by stock distribution changes. However, this outcome escalates over-fishing, whose effects outpace the incipiently favorable climate change effects under three of the four climate projections. Without policy action, the fishery is estimated to collapse in 2030-2035 on average over 1000 runs. We propose an easily implementable and overall welfare-increasing intervention: reduction of fuel subsidies. If fuel subsidies were abolished, ecological sustainability as well as the fishery's welfare contribution would increase regardless of the climate projection.
C1 [Lancker, Kira] German Ctr Integrat Biodivers Halle Jena Leipzig, Biodivers Econ, Leipzig, Germany.
   [Deppenmeier, Anna-Lena] Wageningen Univ, Meteorol & Air Qual Dept, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Deppenmeier, Anna-Lena] Royal Netherlands Meteorol Inst KNMI, R&D Weather & Climate Modeling, De Bilt, Netherlands.
   [Demissie, Teferi] NORCE Norwegian Res Ctr AS, NORCE Climate, Bergen, Norway.
   [Demissie, Teferi] Agr & Food Secur CCAFS East Africa, CGIAR Res Program Climate Change, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
   [Schmidt, Joern O.] Christian Albrechts Univ Kiel, Dept Econ, Kiel, Germany.
C3 Wageningen University & Research; Royal Netherlands Meteorological
   Institute; Norwegian Research Centre (NORCE); CGIAR; University of Kiel
RP Lancker, K (corresponding author), German Ctr Integrat Biodivers Halle Jena Leipzig, Biodivers Econ, Leipzig, Germany.
EM kira.lancker@idiv.de
RI ; Schmidt, Jorn/A-7714-2008
OI Lancker, Kira/0000-0001-8787-1148; Schmidt, Jorn/0000-0002-4420-6532
FU EU; Cluster of Excellence Future Ocean; German Centre for Integrative
   Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig - German Research
   Foundation [FZT 118]; German Research Foundation (DFG); Leipzig
   University within the program of Open Access Publishing
FX We gratefully acknowledge data provision by the Centre of Oceanographic
   Research of DakarThiaroye (CRODT), the Direction des peches maritimes
   (DPM), the National Agency of Statistics and Demography (ANSD), the
   European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). We thank M.
   Quaas and R. Voss for valuable comments. All four authors were supported
   by the EU FP7/2007-2013 PREFACE Project, for which we are grateful. J.
   O. Schmidt acknowledges support from the Cluster of Excellence Future
   Ocean. Kira Lancker gratefully acknowledges the support of the German
   Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig
   funded by the German Research Foundation (FZT 118). We acknowledge
   support from the German Research Foundation (DFG) and Leipzig University
   within the program of Open Access Publishing.
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NR 96
TC 8
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 9
PU PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA 1160 BATTERY STREET, STE 100, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94111 USA
SN 1932-6203
J9 PLOS ONE
JI PLoS One
PD AUG 21
PY 2019
VL 14
IS 8
AR e0220433
DI 10.1371/journal.pone.0220433
PG 24
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA IW5QN
UT WOS:000485033100012
PM 31433801
OA Green Submitted, Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ray, PA
   Bonzanigo, L
   Wi, S
   Yang, YCE
   Karki, P
   García, LE
   Rodriguez, DJ
   Brown, CM
AF Ray, Patrick A.
   Bonzanigo, Laura
   Wi, Sungwook
   Yang, Yi-Chen E.
   Karki, Pravin
   Garcia, Luis E.
   Rodriguez, Diego J.
   Brown, Casey M.
TI Multidimensional stress test for hydropower investments facing climate,
   geophysical and financial uncertainty
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Resilience; Water resources; Hydropower;
   Nepal; Himalayas
ID ROBUST DECISION-MAKING; WATER-RESOURCES; CHANGE IMPACTS; FRESH-WATER;
   POTENTIAL IMPACTS; WEATHER GENERATOR; RIVER-BASINS; HYDROLOGY;
   PROJECTIONS; DAM
AB Investors, developers, policy makers and engineers are rightly concerned about the potential effects of climate change on the future performance of hydropower investments. Hydroelectricity offers potentially low greenhouse-gas emission, renewable energy and reliable energy storage. However, hydroelectricity developments are large, complicated projects and possibly critically vulnerable to changes in climate and other assumptions related to future uncertainties. This paper presents a general assessment approach for evaluating the resilience of hydroelectricity projects to uncertainty in climate and other risk factors (e.g., financial, natural hazard). The process uses a decision analytic framework based on a decision scaling approach, which combines scenario neutral analysis and vulnerability-specific probability assessment. The technical evaluation process involves identification of project objectives, specification of uncertain factors, multi-dimensional sensitivity analysis, and data mining to identify vulnerability-specific scenarios and vulnerability-specific estimations of risk. The process is demonstrated with an application to a proposed hydropower facility on the Arun River in Nepal. The findings of the case study illustrate an example in which climate change is not the critical future uncertainty, and consequently highlight the importance of considering multiple uncertainties in combination.
C1 [Ray, Patrick A.] Univ Cincinnati, Dept Chem & Environm Engn, 601 Engn Res Ctr, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA.
   [Wi, Sungwook; Brown, Casey M.] Univ Massachusetts, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, 130 Nat Resources Rd, Amherst, MA 01003 USA.
   [Bonzanigo, Laura; Karki, Pravin; Garcia, Luis E.; Rodriguez, Diego J.] World Bank, 1818 H St NW, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
   [Yang, Yi-Chen E.] Lehigh Univ, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Fritz Engn Lab, 13 East Packer Ave, Bethlehem, PA 18015 USA.
C3 University System of Ohio; University of Cincinnati; University of
   Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Amherst; The World
   Bank; Lehigh University
RP Ray, PA (corresponding author), Univ Cincinnati, Dept Chem & Environm Engn, 601 Engn Res Ctr, Cincinnati, OH 45221 USA.
EM patrick.ray@uc.edu
RI Yang, Yi-Chen/D-5049-2012
OI Ray, Patrick/0000-0001-9495-2317
FU World Bank [717 4462]; Massachusetts Green High-Performance Computing
   Center (MGHPCC)
FX This project was funded under World Bank Contract 717 4462: Including
   Climate Uncertainty in Water Resources Planning and Project Design -
   Decision Tree Initiative. We also benefited from the generous support of
   the Massachusetts Green High-Performance Computing Center (MGHPCC), and
   the supercomputing facilities managed by the Research Computing
   department at the University of Massachusetts.
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NR 133
TC 57
Z9 63
U1 2
U2 41
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD JAN
PY 2018
VL 48
BP 168
EP 181
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2017.11.013
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA GB9MX
UT WOS:000429399000016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schroth, O
   Angel, J
   Sheppard, S
   Dulic, A
AF Schroth, Olaf
   Angel, Jeannette
   Sheppard, Stephen
   Dulic, Aleksandra
TI Visual Climate Change Communication: From Iconography to Locally Framed
   3D Visualization
SO ENVIRONMENTAL COMMUNICATION-A JOURNAL OF NATURE AND CULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE landscape change; educational games; visual communication; attitudes;
   images; climate change
ID PARTICIPATION; CONSTRUCTION
AB Climate change is an urgent problem with implications registered not only globally, but also on national and local scales. It is a particularly challenging case of environmental communication because its main cause, greenhouse gas emissions, is invisible. The predominant approach of making climate change visible is the use of iconic, often affective, imagery. Literature on the iconography of climate change shows that global iconic motifs, such as polar bears, have contributed to a public perception of the problem as spatially and temporally remote. This paper proposes an alternative approach to global climate change icons by focusing on recognizable representations of local impacts within an interactive game environment. This approach was implemented and tested in a research project based on the municipality of Delta, British Columbia. A major outcome of the research is Future Delta, an interactive educational game featuring 3D visualizations and simulation tools for climate change adaptation and mitigation future scenarios. The empirical evaluation is based on quantitative pre/post-game play questionnaires with 18 students and 10 qualitative expert interviews. The findings support the assumption that interactive 3D imagery is effective in communicating climate change. The quantitative post-questionnaires particularly highlight a shift in support of more local responsibility.
C1 [Schroth, Olaf] Univ Sheffield, Dept Landscape, Sheffield S10 2TN, S Yorkshire, England.
   [Angel, Jeannette] Univ British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada.
   [Sheppard, Stephen] Univ British Columbia, Collaborat Adv Landscape Planning, Fac Forestry & Landscape, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1M9, Canada.
   [Dulic, Aleksandra] Univ British Columbia, Fac Creat & Crit Studies program, Okanagan, BC, Canada.
C3 University of Sheffield; University of British Columbia; University of
   British Columbia; University of British Columbia; University of British
   Columbia Okanagan
RP Schroth, O (corresponding author), Univ Sheffield, Dept Landscape, Arts Tower, Sheffield S10 2TN, S Yorkshire, England.
EM o.schroth@sheffield.ac.uk
RI Schroth, Olaf/H-6319-2019
OI Schroth, Olaf/0000-0001-9377-7211
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NR 44
TC 52
Z9 59
U1 3
U2 65
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1752-4032
EI 1752-4040
J9 ENVIRON COMMUN
JI Environ. Commun.
PD OCT 2
PY 2014
VL 8
IS 4
BP 413
EP 432
DI 10.1080/17524032.2014.906478
PG 20
WC Communication; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Communication; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AU8EZ
UT WOS:000345830500001
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Parker, A
   Saleem, MS
   Lawson, M
AF Parker, A.
   Saleem, M. Saad
   Lawson, M.
TI Sea-level trend analysis for coastal management
SO OCEAN & COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID RISE; ACCELERATION
AB A proper coastal management requires an accurate estimation of sea level trends locally and globally. It is claimed that the sea levels are rising following an exponential growth since the 1990s, and because of that coastal communities are facing huge challenges. Many local governments throughout Australia, including those on the coast, have responded to the various warnings about changes in climate and increases in sea levels by undertaking detailed climate change risk management exercises. These exercises, which use projections passed on by the relevant state bodies, are expensive, but still a fraction of the cost of the capital works that they recommend. Several councils have complained to an Australian Productivity Commission report on climate change adaptation they do not have the money for the capital works required. It is shown here that the exponential growth claim is not supported by any measurement of enough length and quality when properly analysed. The tide gauge results do not support the exponential growth theory. The projections by the relevant state bodies should therefore be revised by considering the measurements and not the models to compute the future sea level rises for the next 30 years following the same trend experienced over the last 30 years. (c) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Parker, A.; Saleem, M. Saad] Univ Ballarat, Ballarat, Vic 3353, Australia.
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C3 Federation University Australia
RP Parker, A (corresponding author), Univ Ballarat, POB 663, Ballarat, Vic 3353, Australia.
EM albertparker@y7mail.com
RI Boretti, Alberto/S-8109-2019
OI Boretti, Alberto/0000-0002-3374-0238
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NR 47
TC 43
Z9 44
U1 0
U2 20
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0964-5691
EI 1873-524X
J9 OCEAN COAST MANAGE
JI Ocean Coastal Manage.
PD MAR
PY 2013
VL 73
BP 63
EP 81
DI 10.1016/j.ocecoaman.2012.12.005
PG 19
WC Oceanography; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Oceanography; Water Resources
GA 102HQ
UT WOS:000315836100007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hong, YC
AF Hong, Yun Chul
TI Climate change and human health
SO JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
LA Korean
DT Article
DE climate change; global warming; temperature adaptation public health
AB Climate changes, particularly global warming, are attributable to human activities, mainly fossil fuel burning which releases greenhouse gases such as CO2. The emissions Of CO2 continue to rise, and climate models project 1.1 degrees C to 6.4 degrees C rise of average surface temperature over the 21(st) century. Health effects from global warming range from increased mortality by extreme weather, floods, and storms to increase of diseases such as malaria, dengue fever, and diarrhea. Korea is not immune to health impacts from global warming. Data on daily temperature of Seoul in 1994 showed a clear association with daily mortality. Rise of sea and surface temperatures also indicates possibility of increase in infectious diseases in Korea. Concentrations of ambient pollutants, particularly ozone, were shown to be associated with surface temperature. Therefore, we are already in the influence of climate change. Adaptation strategy to climate changes is basically a matter of public health, Well -prepared programs for responding to climate changes will minimize health risks. The most effective responses are strengthening of the key functions of environmental management, surveillance, and response to natural disasters and changes of disease patterns associated with global warming. We need to intensify our efforts in preventive public health, and ensure sustainable development and protection of ecosystem for human health.
C1 Seoul Natl Univ, Coll Med, Dept Prevent Med, Seoul 151, South Korea.
C3 Seoul National University (SNU)
RP Hong, YC (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Coll Med, Dept Prevent Med, Seoul 151, South Korea.
EM ychong1@snu.ac.kr
RI Hong, Yun-Chul/J-5725-2012
CR CAMPBELLLENDRUM D, 2007, GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANG
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NR 5
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 34
PU KOREAN MEDICAL ASSOC
PI SEOUL
PA 302-75 INCHON-1 DONG, YONGSAN-GU, SEOUL, 140-721, SOUTH KOREA
SN 1975-8456
EI 2093-5951
J9 J KOREAN MED ASSOC
JI J. Korean Med. Assoc.
PD AUG
PY 2008
VL 51
IS 8
BP 764
EP 769
DI 10.5124/jkma.2008.51.8.764
PG 6
WC Medicine, General & Internal
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC General & Internal Medicine
GA 344OP
UT WOS:000258937500011
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jeffery, ML
   Gütschow, J
   Rocha, MR
   Gieseke, R
AF Jeffery, M. Louise
   Guetschow, Johannes
   Rocha, Marcia R.
   Gieseke, Robert
TI Measuring Success: Improving Assessments of Aggregate Greenhouse Gas
   Emissions Reduction Goals
SO EARTHS FUTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE NDCs; mitigation; Paris Agreement; global stocktake
ID PARIS AGREEMENT; TARGETS
AB Long-term success of the Paris Agreement will depend on the effectiveness of the instruments that it sets in place. Key among these are the nationally determined contributions (NDCs), which elaborate country-specific goals for mitigating and adapting to climate change. One role of the academic community and civil society in supporting the Paris Agreement is to assess the consistency between the near-term action under NDCs and the agreement's long-term goals, thereby providing insight into the chances of long-term success. Here we assess the strengths and weaknesses of current methods to estimate the effectiveness of the mitigation component of NDCs and identify the scientific and political advances that could be made to improve confidence in evaluating NDCs against the long-term goals. Specifically, we highlight (1) the influence of post-2030 assumptions on estimated 21st century warming, (2) uncertainties arising from the lack of published integrated assessment modeling scenarios with long-term, moderate effort reflecting a continuation of the current political situation, and (3) challenges in using a carbon budget approach. We further identify aspects that can be improved in the coming years: clearer communication regarding the meaning, likelihood, and timeframe of NDC consistent warming estimates; additional modeling of long-term, moderate action scenarios; and the identification of metrics for assessing progress that are not based solely on emissions, such as infrastructure investment, energy demand, or installed power capacity.
   Plain Language Summary Under the Paris Agreement, all countries came together to strengthen their commitment to limit warming to well below 2 degrees C and established an aim toward 1.5 degrees C. Each country also presented its own climate action plan, including a description of how it intends to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions. A major challenge of the Paris Agreement is ensuring that, when combined, the individual actions of countries are sufficient to achieve the collective long-term goals. In this study, we review the methods used so far to evaluate the sufficiency of the climate action plans and examine how those methods can be improved. A significant difference between current methods is in the assumption of how countries' efforts to reduce emissions will change after the current timeframe of planned action (until 2030)-will it be weaker, stronger, or similar? Some methods are more complex and help to identify opportunities for additional action, while others are better at providing a quick estimate of the warming we can currently expect. We conclude that combining some of the methods we reviewed, modeling of scenarios similar to the current situation, and some clarification in communication would provide a better assessment of collective progress toward the Paris Agreement goals.
C1 [Jeffery, M. Louise; Guetschow, Johannes; Gieseke, Robert] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Jeffery, M. Louise; Guetschow, Johannes; Gieseke, Robert] Leibniz Assoc, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Rocha, Marcia R.] Climate Analyt gGmbH, Berlin, Germany.
C3 Potsdam Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung
RP Jeffery, ML (corresponding author), Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res PIK, Potsdam, Germany.; Jeffery, ML (corresponding author), Leibniz Assoc, Potsdam, Germany.
EM louise.jeffery@pik-potsdam.de
OI Gutschow, Johannes/0000-0001-9944-3685; Gieseke,
   Robert/0000-0002-1236-5109; Jeffery, Louise/0000-0002-3584-8111
FU German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and
   Nuclear Safety [11_II_093_Global_A_SIDS_and_LDCs,
   16_II_148_Global_A_Impact, 16_I_291_Global_A_CAT]
FX The authors acknowledge and appreciate funding by the German Federal
   Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety
   (11_II_093_Global_A_SIDS_and_LDCs, 16_II_148_Global_A_Impact, and
   16_I_291_Global_A_CAT). The publication of this article was partially
   funded by the Open Access Fund of the Leibniz Association. We are
   grateful to two anonymous reviewers for their constructive comments and
   suggestions. The scenario databases (International Institute for Applied
   Systems Analysis (IIASA), 2014, 2016) used in this study are publicly
   available (https://tntcat.iiasa.ac. at/AR5DB and
   https://tntcat.iiasa.ac.at/SspDb).
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NR 49
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 0
U2 10
PU AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2000 FLORIDA AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20009 USA
EI 2328-4277
J9 EARTHS FUTURE
JI Earth Future
PD SEP
PY 2018
VL 6
IS 9
BP 1260
EP 1274
DI 10.1029/2018EF000865
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology &
   Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
GA GX0GQ
UT WOS:000447388800006
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ariyawardana, A
   Lim-Camacho, L
   Crimp, S
   Wellington, M
   Somogyi, S
AF Ariyawardana, Anoma
   Lim-Camacho, Lilly
   Crimp, Steven
   Wellington, Michael
   Somogyi, Simon
TI Consumer Response to Climate Adaptation Strategies in the Food Sector:
   An Australian Scenario
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Agrifood; Australia; Climate Change; Consumer Response; Incremental
   Adaptation; Transformational Adaptation
ID WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; SEAFOOD SUPPLY CHAINS; AGRICULTURE; PREFERENCES;
   ACCEPTANCE; MITIGATION; ADOPTION; WINE
AB The viability of climate adaptation strategies adopted by agrifood companies rely heavily on how well consumers understand, accept and/or select commodities and their willingness to bare some of the cost of adaptation. To understand this issue in more detail, a survey was undertaken of 1532 Australian consumers to investigate how they respond to adaptation strategies in terms of acceptance and willingness to pay. The survey results contained in this paper focus on three product categories - mango, potato chips and wine. The survey revealed that when faced with climate-adapted mango, potato chips or wine products, respondents were most likely to substitute or purchase less often rather than purchasing a more expensive 'adapted' product or a cheaper 'non-adapted' product. Across the three commodities, the level of acceptance also varied little with socio-demographic factors and the respondent's perceptions of climate change. The study highlights the importance of communicating the climate adaptation initiatives of agrifood companies and the challenges faced by these companies in raising the awareness associated with climate-adapted product.
C1 [Ariyawardana, Anoma; Wellington, Michael] Univ Queensland, Sch Agr & Food Sci, Gatton, Qld 4343, Australia.
   [Lim-Camacho, Lilly] CSIRO Land & Water, Technol Court, Pullenvale, Qld 4069, Australia.
   [Crimp, Steven] Australian Natl Univ, Climate Change Inst, Acton, ACT 2601, Australia.
   [Somogyi, Simon] Dalhousie Univ, Dept Business & Social Sci, Fac Agr, Halifax, NS B3H 4R2, Canada.
C3 University of Queensland; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research
   Organisation (CSIRO); Australian National University; Dalhousie
   University
RP Ariyawardana, A (corresponding author), Univ Queensland, Sch Agr & Food Sci, Gatton, Qld 4343, Australia.
EM a.ariyawardana@uq.edu.au; lilly.lim-camacho@csiro.au;
   steven.crimp@anu.edu.au; m.wellington@uq.edu.au; simon.somogyi@dal.ca
RI Ariyawardana, Anoma/D-3585-2013; Wellington, Michael/GXG-1881-2022;
   Lim-Camacho, Lilly/A-7502-2015; Crimp, Steven/D-6995-2011
OI Somogyi, Simon/0000-0001-8558-1630; Wellington,
   Michael/0000-0002-6585-6120; Lim-Camacho, Lilly/0000-0002-4897-1186;
   Crimp, Steven/0000-0003-4068-573X
FU Australian Government Department of Agriculture 'Filling the Research
   Gap' Funding Program [1194456-215]
FX This project received funding by the Australian Government Department of
   Agriculture 'Filling the Research Gap' Funding Program, Grant no.
   1194456-215.
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NR 38
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 41
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-8009
EI 1873-6106
J9 ECOL ECON
JI Ecol. Econ.
PD DEC
PY 2018
VL 154
BP 383
EP 393
DI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2018.08.022
PG 11
WC Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA GV7DR
UT WOS:000446282700034
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Galindo-Gutiérrez, J
AF Galindo-Gutierrez, Julio
TI The World Bank and 'Maximizing Finance for Development': talk the talk
   but not walk the walk
SO JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Climate finance; Climate change mitigation;
   Private finance; Sustainable development; World Bank
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; COUNTRIES
AB Can the World Bank effectively mobilize private finance to developing countries to support climate change transition? This paper demonstrates that the World Bank's market-based approach, exemplified by its Maximizing Finance for Development (MFD) approach, under-serves areas with a higher need for mitigation and adaptation finance. As such, MFD seems more aligned with donors' interests in climate finance burden sharing, than with recipients' needs. While the World Bank now 'talks the talk' of effectively leveraging private development finance, findings on MFD show that the organization does not yet 'walk the walk'. The paper uses Qualitative Comparative Analysis to show that the MFD agenda is leading the World Bank to systematically ignore countries with low levels of development, poor governance structures, and higher levels of climate risk. By showing that the Bank's MFD approach is insufficient to incentivize private investment in the countries that need adaptation and mitigation finance the most, this article contributes to the critical scholarship on the World Bank that highlights its tendency to behave more like a financial institution than as a development agency, to the detriment of the most vulnerable global populations.
C1 [Galindo-Gutierrez, Julio] Univ York, Dept Polit, York, England.
C3 University of York - UK
RP Galindo-Gutiérrez, J (corresponding author), Univ York, Dept Polit, York, England.
EM julio.galindo-gutierrez@york.ac.uk
OI Galindo-Gutierrez, Julio/0000-0001-5127-9214
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NR 68
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU PALGRAVE MACMILLAN LTD
PI BASINGSTOKE
PA BRUNEL RD BLDG, HOUNDMILLS, BASINGSTOKE RG21 6XS, HANTS, ENGLAND
SN 1408-6980
EI 1581-1980
J9 J INT RELAT DEV
JI J. Int. Relat. Dev.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 27
IS 4
BP 391
EP 413
DI 10.1057/s41268-024-00333-6
EA SEP 2024
PG 23
WC International Relations; Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC International Relations; Government & Law
GA L9K3D
UT WOS:001304378600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lutz-Ley, AN
   Reyes-Castro, PA
AF Lutz-Ley, America N.
   Reyes-Castro, Pablo A.
TI Domestic water saving practices and their relationship with metering and
   the perception of climate change in Mexican households
SO TECNOLOGIA Y CIENCIAS DEL AGUA
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; domestic water; micro-metering; water
   savings; Mexican localities
ID CONSERVATION; TRENDS; BEHAVIOR; BELIEFS; DEMAND; SONORA
AB Among the main consequences of climate change in Mexico are those related to less access to quantities and qualities of water necessary for human and ecosystems' use. In this context, domestic water conservation is framed as an adaptation strategy in face of climate change. The objective of this work is to explore the factors promoting water conservation in Mexican households. The study uses data from more than 13 000 households from the National Household Survey (ENH) developed by INEGI in 2017, and from the Household and Environment Module applied with the ENH. Through regression analysis, we found evidence of the effect of climatic (perception of changes in temperature, precipitation, and extreme climate phenomena), management (billing method to charge for the service), and sociodemographic factors (age, sex, education, and locality size) as predictors of water conservation practices in urban and rural households. The results point to a statistically significant and positive effect of metering consumption to charge for the cost of domestic water; as well as significant but minor effects of the perception of hotter temperatures, changes in rainfall, and impacts of climatic phenomena at the home, as factors related to water conservation practices.
C1 [Lutz-Ley, America N.] El Colegio Sonora, Ctr Estudios Desarrollo, Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico.
   [Reyes-Castro, Pablo A.] El Colegio Sonora, Ctr Estudios Salud & Sociedad, Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico.
RP Lutz-Ley, AN (corresponding author), El Colegio Sonora, Ctr Estudios Desarrollo, Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico.
EM alutz@colson.edu.mx; preyes@colson.edu.mx
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NR 42
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU INST MEXICANO TECHNOLOGIAAGUA
PI MORELOS
PA APARTADO POSTAL 202, MORELOS 62550 CIVAC, MEXICO
SN 0187-8336
EI 2007-2422
J9 TECNOL CIENC AGUA
JI Tecnol. Cienc. Agua
PD JUL-AUG
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 4
BP 1
EP 52
DI 10.24850/j-tyca-2024-04-01
PG 52
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA YM8E1
UT WOS:001268988600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bhatia, S
   Marwaha, D
AF Bhatia, Shikha
   Marwaha, Divya
TI The Influence of Board Factors and Gender Diversity on the ESG
   Disclosure Score: A Study on Indian Companies
SO GLOBAL BUSINESS REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE ESG disclosure score; board independence; board size; board gender
   diversity; CEO duality; female executive participation
ID CORPORATE SOCIAL-RESPONSIBILITY; VOLUNTARY DISCLOSURE; GOVERNANCE; FIRM;
   IMPACT; PERFORMANCE; WOMEN; PAY
AB The focus of stakeholders is shifting from the growth of profits and maximizing shareholders' wealth towards more sustainable growth. The stakeholders are carefully emphasizing various environmental, social and governance issues, such as low carbon economy, climate change adaptation, social impact, transparency in governance etc. This, in turn, is increasing investors' attention and interest in environment, social and governance (ESG) factors. Many investors are integrating ESG considerations into their mainstream portfolios. This article aims to study the impact of board factors on the ESG disclosure score of Indian listed companies. Using panel data for 327 firms listed on NSE and BSE over 7 years, this study examines the impact of board characteristics on the ESG disclosure score of a firm. We apply two-way fixed effect panel regression for analysis and find that board size and board gender diversity are the two significant factors playing a positive influence on the ESG disclosure score for the sample companies. CEO duality is a consistent factor across all the tested models impacting the ESG disclosure score.
C1 [Bhatia, Shikha] Int Management Inst New Delhi, New Delhi 10016, India.
   [Marwaha, Divya] Delhi Technol Univ DTU, Delhi Sch Management, New Delhi, India.
C3 International Management Institute (IMI) New Delhi; Delhi Technological
   University
RP Bhatia, S (corresponding author), Int Management Inst New Delhi, New Delhi 10016, India.
EM shikha.bhatia@imi.edu
RI Bhatia, Shikha/AAR-4273-2020
OI Bhatia, Shikha/0000-0001-9969-4150
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NR 49
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 9
U2 70
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
PI LONDON
PA 1 OLIVERS YARD, 55 CITY ROAD, LONDON EC1Y 1SP, ENGLAND
SN 0972-1509
EI 0973-0664
J9 GLOB BUS REV
JI Glob. Bus. Rev.
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 23
IS 6
SI SI
BP 1544
EP 1557
DI 10.1177/09721509221132067
EA OCT 2022
PG 14
WC Business; Management
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA 6H3YT
UT WOS:000869415900001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wamsler, C
   Mulligan, J
   Bukachi, V
   Mumbi, C
AF Wamsler, Christine
   Mulligan, Joe
   Bukachi, Vera
   Mumbi, Charity
TI Activating transformation: integrating interior dimensions of climate
   change in adaptation planning
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; disaster risk reduction; inner
   transformation; emotions; mindsets; paradigms; citizen participation
ID SUSTAINABILITY; GOVERNANCE; MINDFULNESS; CAPACITY; INSTITUTIONS;
   RESILIENCE; POLITICS; RISK
AB The increasing number and complexity of urban risk and disasters have a significant bearing on the emotional and mental wellbeing of those who are exposed and hamper their responses. Nevertheless, current discourses and approaches to increase resilience tend to focus on broader socio-economic, physical and environmental systems. This reflects a failure by the academic and practitioner communities to consider the potential contribution of human interior dimensions in adaptation planning. Concomitantly, a growing body of knowledge highlights the need to bridge the gap between internal and external (systems) approaches for achieving sustainable transformations. Against this background, this article aims to increase knowledge on the operationalization of such more integrative approaches in marginal settings. Based on a case study of a flood adaptation project in Kibera, Kenya, we assess the need and potential ways to address interior dimensions in the context of project planning, design and implementation. We show how the integration of such dimensions occurs in existing adaptation projects and why this matters. On this basis, we provide methodological and operational recommendations regarding ways to support more integrative approaches that bridge subjective, intersubjective, objective and interobjective perspectives to support transformation.
C1 [Wamsler, Christine] Lund Univ Ctr Sustainabil Studies LUCSUS, Sustainabil Sci, Lund, Sweden.
   [Mulligan, Joe] KTH Royal Inst Technol, Stockholm, Sweden.
   [Mulligan, Joe; Bukachi, Vera] Kounkuey Design Initiat KDI, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Mumbi, Charity] Kenya Federat Slum Dwellers, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 Lund University; Royal Institute of Technology
RP Wamsler, C (corresponding author), Lund Univ, Lund Univ Ctr Sustainabil Studies LUCSUS, Box 170, S-22100 Lund, Sweden.
EM christine.wamsler@lucsus.lu.se
OI Bukachi, Vera/0000-0003-0448-1983
FU Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency Sida; Swedish
   Research Council FORMAS [2016-06334, 2019-00390, 2019-01969]; Swedish
   Research Council VR [2016-06334, 2019-00390, 2019-01969]; Swedish
   Research Council [2019-00390, 2016-06334] Funding Source: Swedish
   Research Council; Formas [2019-01969, 2019-00390] Funding Source: Formas
FX The work was supported by the Swedish International Development
   Cooperation Agency Sida and the Swedish Research Councils FORMAS and VR
   (2016-06334; 2019-00390; 2019-01969).
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NR 66
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 1
U2 23
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD MAY 28
PY 2023
VL 15
IS 5
BP 366
EP 378
DI 10.1080/17565529.2022.2089089
EA JUL 2022
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA L0NF0
UT WOS:000824873700001
OA hybrid, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Estiningtyas, W
   Mulyani, A
   Sumaryanto
   Kartiwa, B
AF Estiningtyas, W.
   Mulyani, A.
   Sumaryanto
   Kartiwa, B.
GP IOP
TI Assessing the vulnerability of food farming system to support climate
   change adaptation: A case study in Java, Indonesia
SO 1ST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE TROPICAL LAND MANAGEMENT
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 1st International Conference on Sustainable Tropical Land Management
   (ICSTLM)
CY SEP 16-18, 2020
CL ELECTR NETWORK
SP Indonesian Ctr Agr Land Resources Res & Dev
ID ELEVATED CO2; RICE YIELD; TEMPERATURE; MANAGEMENT; IMPACTS; GROWTH;
   VALLEY; CHINA; RISK
AB Increasing resilience to climate change is one of the priorities of the Government of Indonesia. Climate change has a significant impact on the agricultural sector and is projected to global gross domestic product. Java Island, as a center of food production, has a strategic location because of its strong impact on food availability in Indonesia. The study aimed to provide information about the status of the vulnerability of fanning system for food at the district/city level in Java Island and the determinant factors that affect the level of vulnerability. The analysis was based on soil fertility, water availability and demand, climate, and socio-economy expressed in terms of exposure and sensitivity index and adaptation capacity index using the quadrant method. The results show that 20% of districts/cities in Java have very high levels of vulnerability. The main determinants identified in Java are the ratio of the number of extension agents and the number of farmer groups/rice field area and the lice consumption ratio to total carbohydrate food. The results of this study can be used as a reference in determining priority locations and formulating adaptation programs and actions to reduce the impact of climate change.
C1 [Estiningtyas, W.; Kartiwa, B.] Indonesian Agroclimate & Hydrol Res Inst, Bogor, Indonesia.
   [Mulyani, A.] Indonesian Ctr Agr Land Resources Res & Dev, Bogor, Indonesia.
   [Sumaryanto] Indonesian Ctr Agr Socio Econ & Policy Studies, Bogor, Indonesia.
RP Estiningtyas, W (corresponding author), Indonesian Agroclimate & Hydrol Res Inst, Bogor, Indonesia.
EM woro_esti@yahoo.com
RI Kartiwa, Budi/IVU-9254-2023
OI Kartiwa, Budi/0000-0001-7310-0633; Estiningtyas,
   Woro/0000-0002-5514-2132
FU Indonesian Agency for Agricultural Research and Development (IAARD)
   through the Indonesian Center for Agricultural Land Resources Research
   and Development (ICALRD); Indonesian Agroclimate and Hydrology Research
   Institute (IAHRI)
FX This research supported by the Indonesian Agency for Agricultural
   Research and Development (IAARD) through the Indonesian Center for
   Agricultural Land Resources Research and Development (ICALRD) and the
   Indonesian Agroclimate and Hydrology Research Institute (IAHRI). Thank
   you to Revo and Adilla, who helped in data preparation and mapping. All
   authors are the main contributors in writing this paper.
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NR 43
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 12
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2021
VL 648
AR 012093
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/648/1/012093
PG 10
WC Agronomy; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental
   Sciences; Soil Science
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA BS1AP
UT WOS:000686173800093
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hina, S
   Saleem, F
   Arshad, A
   Hina, A
   Ullah, I
AF Hina, Saadia
   Saleem, Farhan
   Arshad, Arfan
   Hina, Alina
   Ullah, Irfan
TI Droughts over Pakistan: possible cycles, precursors and associated
   mechanisms
SO GEOMATICS NATURAL HAZARDS & RISK
LA English
DT Article
DE Pakistan; drought severity; composite analysis; drought precursors;
   prediction
ID ASIAN SUMMER MONSOON; STANDARDIZED PRECIPITATION INDEX; SPATIOTEMPORAL
   VARIABILITY; SEASONAL DROUGHT; CIRCUMGLOBAL TELECONNECTION; COMPOSITE
   ANALYSIS; WATER-RESOURCES; SOUTHWEST ASIA; CLIMATE; CIRCULATION
AB In the recent few decades, climate variability had severely affected the socio-economic and environmental conditions worldwide. Frequent shifts in the atmospheric circulation patterns affect large parts of the globe, predominantly the arid and semi-arid regions facing severe to moderate droughts. Therefore, precursors of drought events and their associated mechanisms are important to understand. This study explores the possible cycles and precursor conditions that might be employed for predicting upcoming droughts in Pakistan. Standardize precipitation index and the single Z-index are used to detect and rank the drought years. Moreover, composite analysis is carried out to explore the large-scale circulation anomalies related to extreme drought events. Results demonstrate that extreme drought events are highly correlated with wind patterns and intrinsic weather system in the Pacific and Indian Oceans. This study analyzed air temperature, sea level pressure and geopotential height in the average time-period of January to March, sea surface temperature from October to December, and wind vectors in March to May as precursors that could be employed to predict the occurrence of droughts in Pakistan. This information is of significance for policymakers to plan climate change adaptive measures accordingly.
C1 [Hina, Saadia] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Atmospher Phys, State Key Lab Numer Modelling Atmospher Sci & Geo, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Hina, Saadia; Saleem, Farhan] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Earth & Planetary Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Hina, Saadia] Govt Coll Univ Faisalabad, Dept Environm Sci & Engn, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
   [Saleem, Farhan] Chinese Acad Sci, Int Ctr Climate & Environm Sci, Inst Atmospher Phys, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Arshad, Arfan] Univ Agr Faisalabad, Dept Irrigat & Drainage Engn, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
   [Hina, Alina] Univ Agr Faisalabad, Dept Math & Stat, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
   [Ullah, Irfan] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Sch Atmospher Sci, Nanjing, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Atmospheric Physics, CAS;
   Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,
   CAS; Government College University Faisalabad; Chinese Academy of
   Sciences; Institute of Atmospheric Physics, CAS; University of
   Agriculture Faisalabad; University of Agriculture Faisalabad; Nanjing
   University of Information Science & Technology
RP Hina, S (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Atmospher Phys, State Key Lab Numer Modelling Atmospher Sci & Geo, Beijing, Peoples R China.; Hina, S (corresponding author), Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Coll Earth & Planetary Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China.; Hina, S (corresponding author), Govt Coll Univ Faisalabad, Dept Environm Sci & Engn, Faisalabad, Pakistan.
EM saadia.hina@lasg.iap.ac.cn
RI Arshad, Arfan/AAX-6947-2021; Hina, Saadia/JMQ-9491-2023; Ullah,
   Irfan/AEN-0985-2022; Arshad, Arfan/JFS-3712-2023
OI Ullah, Irfan/0000-0002-6913-7481; Hina, Saadia/0000-0002-6203-9694;
   Arshad, Arfan/0000-0002-0726-1807
FU Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research (STEP) program
   [2019QZKK0102]
FX This study was supported by the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific
   Expedition and Research (STEP) program (grant no. 2019QZKK0102).
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NR 105
TC 46
Z9 46
U1 3
U2 18
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1947-5705
EI 1947-5713
J9 GEOMAT NAT HAZ RISK
JI Geomat. Nat. Hazards Risk
PD JAN 1
PY 2021
VL 12
IS 1
BP 1638
EP 1668
DI 10.1080/19475705.2021.1938703
PG 31
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA SZ9OT
UT WOS:000666886900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Yoo, BH
   Kim, J
   Lee, BW
   Hoogenboom, G
   Kim, KS
AF Yoo, Byoung Hyun
   Kim, Junhwan
   Lee, Byun-Woo
   Hoogenboom, Gerrit
   Kim, Kwang Soo
TI A surrogate weighted mean ensemble method to reduce the uncertainty at a
   regional scale for the calculation of potential evapotranspiration
SO SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; MULTIMODEL ENSEMBLES; MODEL; SKILL; PROJECTIONS;
   IMPACTS; PERFORMANCE
AB We propose a weighted ensemble approach using a surrogate variable. As a case study, the degree of agreement (DOA) statistics for potential evapotranspiration (PET) was determined to compare the ordinary arithmetic mean ensemble (OAME) method and the surrogate weighted mean ensemble (SWME) method for three domains. Solar radiation was used as the surrogate variable to determine the weight values for the ensemble members. Singular vector decomposition with truncation values was used to select five ensemble members for the SWME method. The SWME method tended to have greater DOA statistics for PET than the OAME method with all available models. The distribution of PET values for the SWME method also had greater DOA statistics than that for the OAME method over relatively large spatial extent by month. These results suggest that the SWME method based on the weight value derived from the surrogate variable is suitable for exploiting both diversity and elitism to minimize the uncertainty of PET ensemble data. These findings could contribute to a better design of climate change adaptation options by improving confidence of PET projection data for the assessment of climate change impact on natural and agricultural ecosystems using the SWME method.
C1 [Yoo, Byoung Hyun; Lee, Byun-Woo; Kim, Kwang Soo] Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Plant Sci, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
   [Kim, Junhwan] Rural Dev Adm, Crop Prod & Physiol Div, Natl Inst Crop Sci, Wonju 55365, Jeollabuk Do, South Korea.
   [Hoogenboom, Gerrit] Univ Florida, Dept Agr & Biol Engn, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
   [Hoogenboom, Gerrit] Univ Florida, Inst Sustainable Food Syst, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
   [Kim, Kwang Soo] Seoul Natl Univ, Res Inst Agr & Life Sci, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
C3 Seoul National University (SNU); Rural Development Administration (RDA),
   Republic of Korea; National Institute of Crop Science; State University
   System of Florida; University of Florida; State University System of
   Florida; University of Florida; Seoul National University (SNU)
RP Kim, KS (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Plant Sci, Seoul 08826, South Korea.; Kim, KS (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Res Inst Agr & Life Sci, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
EM luxwkang@snu.ac.kr
RI Yoo, Byoung Hyun/KHV-7054-2024; Hoogenboom, Gerrit/F-3946-2010
OI Kim, Kwang Soo/0000-0003-2284-4389; Hoogenboom,
   Gerrit/0000-0002-1555-0537
FU Korea Ministry of Environment and Rural Development Administration,
   Republic of Korea [2014001310008, PJ013452042019]
FX This study was supported by the Korea Ministry of Environment and Rural
   Development Administration, Republic of Korea, under "Climate Change
   Correspondence Program" (2014001310008) and "Cooperative Research for
   Agriculture Science & Technology Development (PJ013452042019)" programs,
   respectively. We acknowledge the World Climate Research Programme's
   Working Group on Regional Climate, and the Working Group on Coupled
   Modelling, former coordinating body of CORDEX and responsible panel for
   CMIP5. We also thank the climate modelling groups (listed in
   Supplementary Fig. 1 and Supplementary Table S1 of this paper) for
   producing and making available their model output. We also acknowledge
   the Earth System Grid Federation infrastructure an international effort
   led by the U.S. Department of Energy's Program for Climate Model
   Diagnosis and Intercomparison, the European Network for Earth System
   Modelling and other partners in the Global Organisation for Earth System
   Science Portals (GO-ESSP).
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TC 11
Z9 11
U1 1
U2 7
PU NATURE PORTFOLIO
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, BERLIN, 14197, GERMANY
SN 2045-2322
J9 SCI REP-UK
JI Sci Rep
PD JAN 21
PY 2020
VL 10
IS 1
AR 870
DI 10.1038/s41598-020-57466-0
PG 11
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA KJ6AN
UT WOS:000512142100108
PM 31964919
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lomba-Fernández, C
   Labaka, L
   Hernantes, J
AF Lomba-Fernandez, Cinta
   Labaka, Leire
   Hernantes, Josune
TI Urban Critical Infrastructure's Governance Framework for Climate
   Resilient Cities
SO EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE City Resilience; Urban Critical Infrastructures; Governance Framework;
   Climate Change Adaptation
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; MATURITY MODEL; INVOLVEMENT
AB Climate change affects cities worldwide conditioning their sustainable development. Cities will concentrate around 70% of the world population by 2050 accounting for 75% of the world's resources consumption. For that reason, cities must act against climate change adopting resilience strategies. Resilience strategies recognize the importance of the reliability and functioning of urban critical infrastructures as they provide essential services for the citizens and they are crucial for the resolution and recovery of the crises. However, the integration of critical infrastructures in the city climate resilience strategies is challenging because critical infrastructures are complex systems, strongly interconnected one to each other and generally, they belong or are operated by private companies. This research proposes a governance framework for better integration of the management of urban critical infrastructures into the city climate resilience strategy. The framework has been developed from academic literature and has been enriched with insights from workshops and interviews with experts and practitioners. As a result, the framework tackles four aspects of governance: (1) modes of governance; (2) stakeholders' roles; (3) processes and (4) instruments. These aspects will help to improve the vertical integration, cross-sectorial coordination, innovation and knowledge, and cooperation needed for improving city resilience.
C1 [Lomba-Fernandez, Cinta; Labaka, Leire; Hernantes, Josune] Univ Navarra, Tecnun, Pamplona, Spain.
C3 University of Navarra
RP Lomba-Fernández, C (corresponding author), Univ Navarra, Tecnun, Pamplona, Spain.
RI Lomba-Fernández, Cinta/AAB-8489-2021; Hernantes, Josune/C-9247-2017;
   Labaka, Leire/H-9744-2014
OI Labaka, Leire/0000-0002-1721-0624; Lomba-Fernandez,
   Cinta/0000-0002-6338-5580
FU Fundacion AON
FX This research is funded by the Fundacion AON.
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Z9 3
U1 4
U2 45
PU EUROPEAN CENTER SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
PI ROME
PA VIA DEI FIORI 34, ROME, 00172, ITALY
SN 2239-5938
EI 2239-6101
J9 EUR J SUSTAIN DEV
JI Eur. J. Sustain. Dev.
PY 2020
VL 9
IS 3
BP 145
EP 156
DI 10.14207/ejsd.2020.v9n3p145
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA NZ0RH
UT WOS:000576799500013
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Meng, M
   Dabrowski, M
   Tai, YT
   Stead, D
   Chan, F
AF Meng, Meng
   Dabrowski, Marcin
   Tai, Yuting
   Stead, Dominic
   Chan, Faith
TI Collaborative spatial planning in the face of flood risk in delta
   cities: A policy framing perspective
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Flood risk; Delta cities; Spatial planning; Framing
   analysis; Boundary spanning
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; PEARL RIVER DELTA; URBAN; MANAGEMENT;
   GOVERNANCE; INTERFACE; CONFLICT; INSIGHTS
AB Integration of flood risk in spatial planning is increasingly seen as a way to enhance cities' resilience to the growing flood hazards, albeit its operationalisation remains challenging. This study aims to explain the reasons for this difficulty through the case study of Guangzhou, a Chinese delta city that is highly vulnerable to coastal, fluvial and pluvial flooding, particularly in the context of a changing climate and rapid expansion of the urban fabric. It does so by investigating the recognition of flood risk in spatial planning and vice-versa, of spatial issues in the flood risk management field, using framing analysis. The paper reveals that the integration of flood risk concerns in spatial planning in Guangzhou remains an emerging process, gradually shifting from informal to formal activities grounded in legislation. This happens through percolation of framing discourse from the flood risk management policy to spatial planning, leading to changes in problem setting, action scripts and the prescribed governance arrangements in the planning discourse. The vagueness of governance arrangements, however, undermines the integration of flood risk management in spatial planning.
C1 [Meng, Meng; Dabrowski, Marcin; Tai, Yuting; Stead, Dominic] Delft Univ Technol TU Delft, Dept Urbanism, Fac Architecture & Built Environm, Julianalaan 134, NL-2628 BL Delft, Netherlands.
   [Chan, Faith] Univ Nottingham, Fac Engn, Sch Geog Sci, SEB319,Ningbo Campus,199 Taikang East Rd,Univ Pk, Ningbo 315100, Zhejiang, Peoples R China.
   [Chan, Faith] Univ Leeds, Sch Geog, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
C3 Delft University of Technology; University of Nottingham Ningbo China;
   University of Leeds
RP Meng, M (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol TU Delft, Dept Urbanism, Fac Architecture & Built Environm, Julianalaan 134, NL-2628 BL Delft, Netherlands.
EM m.meng@tudelft.nl; m.m.dabrowski@tudelft.nl; Y.Tai@tudelft.nl;
   D.Stead@tudelft.nl; faith.chan@nottingham.edu.cn
RI Meng, Meng/GPK-8447-2022; Stead, Dominic/O-8029-2014; Chan, Faith Ka
   Shun/H-1541-2017
OI meng, meng/0000-0002-7306-0544; Chan, Faith Ka Shun/0000-0001-6091-6596;
   Stead, Dominic/0000-0002-8198-785X
FU China Scholarship Council; Ningbo Municipal Bureau of Science and
   Technology [20140105008005]
FX The author would like to thank China Scholarship Council and Ningbo
   Municipal Bureau of Science and Technology Grant: 20140105008005, which
   provide funds for this research.
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NR 52
TC 28
Z9 29
U1 10
U2 47
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD JUN
PY 2019
VL 96
BP 95
EP 104
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2019.03.006
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HX6KQ
UT WOS:000467512900012
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pilli-Sihvola, K
   Harjanne, A
   Haavisto, R
AF Pilli-Sihvola, Karoliina
   Harjanne, Atte
   Haavisto, Riina
TI Adaptation by the least vulnerable: Managing climate and disaster risks
   in Finland
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Disaster risk reduction; Finland;
   Governance; Welfare state
ID NATIONAL LEVEL; REDUCTION; MANAGEMENT; SERVICES; NORWAY; NEED
AB Disaster risk reduction (DRR) and climate change adaptation (CCA) literature has traditionally focused on the countries and regions hit hardest by natural hazards. In this paper, we take a different perspective by turning our eyes upon Finland, a Nordic welfare state and a low vulnerability and exposure society. We analyse and discuss how well the existing DRR and CCA approaches reflect the perspective of the least vulnerable countries and whether the current ways of determining vulnerability and exposure neglect some risks or hinder the seizing opportunities brought by climate change.
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C1 [Pilli-Sihvola, Karoliina; Harjanne, Atte; Haavisto, Riina] Finnish Meteorol Inst, POB 503, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland.
   [Pilli-Sihvola, Karoliina] Univ Helsinki, Fac Agr & Forestry, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Harjanne, Atte] Aalto Univ, Sch Business, POB 21210, FI-00076 Aalto, Finland.
C3 Finnish Meteorological Institute; University of Helsinki; Aalto
   University
RP Pilli-Sihvola, K (corresponding author), Finnish Meteorol Inst, POB 503, FI-00101 Helsinki, Finland.
EM karoliina.pilli-sihvola@fmi.fi
OI Haavisto, Riina/0000-0002-1052-783X
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U2 20
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
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VL 31
BP 1266
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WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
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WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA GV7ZE
UT WOS:000446353300119
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barnett, J
   McMichael, C
AF Barnett, Jon
   McMichael, Celia
TI The effects of climate change on the geography and timing of human
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SO POPULATION AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Islands; Labour; Migration; Resettlement; Temporality
ID NEW-ZEALAND; LABOR MIGRATION; PACIFIC; ADAPTATION; AUSTRALIA; ISLANDS;
   SEA; LIVELIHOODS; CRISIS; HAZARD
AB Human mobility over different distances and time scales has long been associated with environmental change, and the idea of climate change is now affecting movement in new ways. In this paper, we discuss three cases from the South Pacific to explain the ways anticipated climate futures are changing mobility in the present. First, we examine village relocation in response to coastal erosion and inundation in Fiji, drawing on our study of the unfolding experience of Narikoso village in Kadavu Province. In contrast to this spatially constrained process of permanent relocation, we examine the spatially extended yet temporally constrained seasonal migrant worker programme that aims to support economic development in the Pacific Islands by providing temporary work visas in Australia and New Zealand. Finally, we examine the likely effects of proposed open labour markets as a means to promote climate change adaptation, through a study of the analogous example of Niuean migration to New Zealand which has resulted in both permanent migration and a slow circulation of people between both countries. Across these examples, we highlight emerging and potentially constructive ways in which climate change is altering the spatio-temporal patterns and rhythms of mobility.
C1 [Barnett, Jon; McMichael, Celia] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, 221 Bouverie St, Melbourne, Vic 3053, Australia.
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RP Barnett, J (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, 221 Bouverie St, Melbourne, Vic 3053, Australia.
EM jbarn@unimelb.edu.au; celia.mcmichael@unimelb.edu.au
RI mcmichael, celia/ABD-3118-2020; Barnett, Jon/AAQ-9002-2021; Barnett,
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NR 98
TC 49
Z9 56
U1 10
U2 48
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0199-0039
EI 1573-7810
J9 POPUL ENVIRON
JI Popul. Env.
PD JUN
PY 2018
VL 39
IS 4
SI SI
BP 339
EP 356
DI 10.1007/s11111-018-0295-5
PG 18
WC Demography; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Demography; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GJ1HP
UT WOS:000435006000004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Koivisto, JE
   Nohrstedt, D
AF Koivisto, Jenni E.
   Nohrstedt, Daniel
TI A policymaking perspective on disaster risk reduction in Mozambique
SO ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Disaster risk reduction; adaptation; barriers; enabling factors; policy
   change; Mozambique
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADAPTIVE GOVERNANCE; VULNERABILITY; CAPACITY;
   INSIGHTS; FLOODS; INSTITUTIONS; OPPORTUNITY; RESILIENCE; MANAGEMENT
AB Academics and practitioners alike emphasise that public policy plays a key role to support efforts to reduce disaster risks and to buffer the impacts of natural hazards when they occur. This involves developing public policies to promote disaster risk reduction (DRR). However, the public policy dimension has only recently begun to receive attention in empirical research on DRR. Processes of policy change are discussed, yet less often studied, and more empirical research is needed to advance the understanding of the conditions for DRR policy change. Combining insights from adaptation research and public policy theory, this study investigates the long-term development of DRR policy in Mozambique as perceived by multiple stakeholders. The study identifies barriers and enabling factors influencing the DRR policy process over time. Using data from 37 semi-structured interviews, the study finds six main enabling factors supporting DRR policy change. Among the most important enabling factors are past disasters and broad stakeholder involvement. The study also unveils several barriers to DRR policy change, including resource insufficiency and lack of coordination among stakeholders. The study concludes with suggestions for integrating DRR and policy process research and lessons for policymaking in support of DRR over time.
C1 [Koivisto, Jenni E.] Karlstad Univ, Ctr Climate & Safety, SE-65188 Karlstad, Sweden.
   [Koivisto, Jenni E.] Karlstad Univ, CNDS, SE-65188 Karlstad, Sweden.
   [Nohrstedt, Daniel] Uppsala Univ, Dept Govt, Uppsala, Sweden.
   [Nohrstedt, Daniel] Uppsala Univ, CNDS, Uppsala, Sweden.
C3 Karlstad University; Karlstad University; Uppsala University; Centre of
   Natural Hazards & Disaster Science (CNDS); Uppsala University
RP Koivisto, JE (corresponding author), Karlstad Univ, Ctr Climate & Safety, SE-65188 Karlstad, Sweden.; Koivisto, JE (corresponding author), Karlstad Univ, CNDS, SE-65188 Karlstad, Sweden.
EM jenni.koivisto@kau.se
RI Nohrstedt, Daniel/K-2140-2017
OI Koivisto, Jenni/0000-0002-5514-8374
FU Swedish Strategic Research Area Initiative
FX This work was supported by the Swedish Strategic Research Area
   Initiative.
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NR 71
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 21
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1747-7891
EI 1878-0059
J9 ENVIRON HAZARDS-UK
JI Environ. Hazards
PY 2017
VL 16
IS 3
BP 210
EP 227
DI 10.1080/17477891.2016.1218820
PG 18
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FE0MI
UT WOS:000407914000002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Feary, DA
   Pratchett, MS
   Emslie, MJ
   Fowler, AM
   Figueira, WF
   Luiz, OJ
   Nakamura, Y
   Booth, DJ
AF Feary, David A.
   Pratchett, Morgan S.
   Emslie, Micheal J.
   Fowler, Ashley M.
   Figueira, Will F.
   Luiz, Osmar J.
   Nakamura, Yohei
   Booth, David J.
TI Latitudinal shifts in coral reef fishes: why some species do and others
   do not shift
SO FISH AND FISHERIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; global warming; range shifts; temperate reef;
   tropical reef fishes; tropical vagrant
ID SUSTAINED SWIMMING ABILITIES; PELAGIC LARVAL DURATION; EAST AUSTRALIAN
   CURRENT; LIFE-HISTORY TRAITS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SELF-RECRUITMENT; RANGE
   SHIFTS; INTERSPECIFIC COMPETITION; HABITAT SPECIALIZATION; MARINE
   POPULATIONS
AB Climate change is resulting in rapid poleward shifts in the geographical distribution of many tropical fish species, but it is equally apparent that some fishes are failing to exhibit expected shifts in their geographical distribution. There is still little understanding of the species-specific traits that may constrain or promote successful establishment of populations in temperate regions. We review the factors likely to affect population establishment, including larval supply, settlement and post-settlement processes. In addition, we conduct meta-analyses on existing and new data to examine relationships between species-specific traits and vagrancy. We show that tropical vagrant species are more likely to originate from high-latitude populations, while at the demographic level, tropical fish species with large body size, high swimming ability, large size at settlement and pelagic spawning behaviour are more likely to show successful settlement into temperate habitats. We also show that both habitat and food limitation at settlement and within juvenile stages may constrain tropical vagrant communities to those species with medium to low reliance on coral resources.
C1 [Feary, David A.; Fowler, Ashley M.; Booth, David J.] Univ Technol Sydney, Sch Environm, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia.
   [Pratchett, Morgan S.] James Cook Univ, ARC Ctr Excellence Coral Reef Studies, Townsville, Qld Q4811, Australia.
   [Emslie, Micheal J.] Australian Inst Marine Sci, Townsville, Qld 4810, Australia.
   [Figueira, Will F.] Univ Sydney, Sch Biol Sci, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
   [Luiz, Osmar J.] Macquarie Univ, Dept Biol Sci, Sydney, NSW 2109, Australia.
   [Nakamura, Yohei] Kochi Univ, Grad Sch Kuroshio Sci, Nankoku, Kochi 7838502, Japan.
C3 University of Technology Sydney; James Cook University; ARC Centre of
   Excellence for Coral Reef Studies; Australian Institute of Marine
   Science; University of Sydney; Macquarie University; Kochi University
RP Feary, DA (corresponding author), Univ Technol Sydney, Sch Environm, 123 Broadway, Sydney, NSW 2007, Australia.
EM david.feary@uts.edu.au
RI Booth, David/A-5783-2010; Pratchett, Morgan/AAW-5179-2020; Luiz,
   Osmar/D-9202-2011; Figueira, Will/A-5163-2009; Pratchett,
   Morgan/A-9256-2010; Fowler, Ashley/N-8623-2016
OI Figueira, Will/0000-0001-9472-8710; Luiz, Osmar/0000-0002-6995-6524;
   Pratchett, Morgan/0000-0002-1862-8459; Fowler,
   Ashley/0000-0003-3075-7066; Booth, David/0000-0002-8256-1412; Nakamura,
   Yohei/0000-0002-2412-2139
FU University of Technology, Sydney; Sydney Institute of Marine Science
FX DAF was funded by the University of Technology, Sydney, under the
   Chancellors Postdoctoral Fellowship scheme. OJL was supported by a
   doctoral fellowship grant provided by the Sydney Institute of Marine
   Science. Thanks to Nicolas Bailly (Fishbase) for providing data. This
   paper is contribution 87 from the Sydney Institute of Marine Science.
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NR 201
TC 142
Z9 155
U1 2
U2 139
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1467-2960
EI 1467-2979
J9 FISH FISH
JI Fish. Fish.
PD DEC
PY 2014
VL 15
IS 4
BP 593
EP 615
DI 10.1111/faf.12036
PG 23
WC Fisheries
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Fisheries
GA AS6FG
UT WOS:000344359300003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Langston, C
   Yung, EHK
   Chan, EHW
AF Langston, Craig
   Yung, Esther Hiu-Kwan
   Chan, Edwin Hon-Wan
TI The application of ARP modelling to adaptive reuse projects in Hong Kong
SO HABITAT INTERNATIONAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptive reuse; Revitalization; Historic buildings; Hong Kong
ID SUSTAINABILITY
AB Protecting the heritage of our increasingly ageing building stock is becoming more important but difficult, particularly as citizens look for ways to minimize their impact on scarce resources and fragile environments in the context of impending climate change. Adaptive reuse is an efficient way to reuse existing buildings that have become obsolete by 'recycling' them in-situ through giving them a new functional purpose. In this paper, using Hong Kong as a case study of dense urban development with immense redevelopment pressure, adaptive reuse potential (ARP) modelling is deployed to test the processes underway in Hong Kong for the adaptive reuse of 14 existing publicly owned historic buildings with various degrees of heritage protection, and rank these buildings to determine the most effective time to undertake adaptive reuse intervention. The best and worst projects are then investigated in further detail to provide insight into the validity of the modelling process. This research illustrates that the ARP model works well for the two in-depth studies, and recommends further use of this technique by government authorities to help manage the daunting task of where best to prioritize its resources for heritage protection. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Langston, Craig] Bond Univ, Southport, Qld 4229, Australia.
   [Yung, Esther Hiu-Kwan; Chan, Edwin Hon-Wan] Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Bldg & Real Estate, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
C3 Bond University; Hong Kong Polytechnic University
RP Yung, EHK (corresponding author), Hong Kong Polytech Univ, Dept Bldg & Real Estate, Hong Kong, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
EM clangsto@bond.edu.au; ehkyung@gmail.com; bsedchan@inet.polyu.edu.hk
RI Yung, Esther/ABF-3279-2020; Langston, Craig/ABA-5453-2020; Chan, Edwin
   Hon Wan/D-9630-2012
OI YUNG, Esther H.K./0000-0002-0116-2509; Yung, Esther/0000-0003-0028-9062;
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NR 38
TC 38
Z9 40
U1 0
U2 39
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0197-3975
EI 1873-5428
J9 HABITAT INT
JI Habitat Int.
PD OCT
PY 2013
VL 40
BP 233
EP 243
DI 10.1016/j.habitatint.2013.05.002
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies; Regional & Urban Planning;
   Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA 204YD
UT WOS:000323406300029
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lester, C
AF Lester, Charles
TI CZM in California: Successes and Challenges Ahead
SO COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE california coastal commission; coastal zone management; federal
   consistency; local coastal program
ID COASTAL ZONE
AB California has a forty-year history of successful coastal zone management. The San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission, the California Coastal Commission, and the State Coastal Conservancy have protected and made accessible hundreds of miles of shoreline. While each agency has played a critical role, this article focuses on the Coastal Commission. Implementing the California Coastal Act, the Coastal Commission has partnered with local government, other agencies, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), and the public to concentrate new development in already developed areas, and much of the rural coastal zone looks as it did in 1972. The Commission has protected and expanded public shoreline access through its regulatory actions. Using strong ecological science the Commission has protected a wide variety of sensitive habitats and wetlands. And under the authority of the Coastal Zone Management Act, the Commission has reviewed thousands of federal projects to assure that they are consistent with the Coastal Act. Challenges continue, though, including population growth, sea-level rise, and inadequate funding to update local coastal land use plans to address new issues, such as climate change adaptation. New investment is needed at the national, state, and local level to continue the success of the California program.
C1 Calif Coastal Commiss, San Francisco, CA 94105 USA.
RP Lester, C (corresponding author), Calif Coastal Commiss, 45 Fremont St,Suite 2000, San Francisco, CA 94105 USA.
EM Charles.Lester@coastal.ca.gov
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   University of California Santa Barbara (UCSB), 2013, UCSB SONGS MIT MON
NR 81
TC 6
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 38
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 325 CHESTNUT ST, SUITE 800, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 0892-0753
J9 COAST MANAGE
JI Coast. Manage.
PD MAY 4
PY 2013
VL 41
IS 3
SI SI
BP 219
EP 244
DI 10.1080/08920753.2013.784891
PG 26
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 149LB
UT WOS:000319320000004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Opitz-Stapleton, S
   Gangopadhyay, S
AF Opitz-Stapleton, Sarah
   Gangopadhyay, Subhrendu
TI A non-parametric, statistical downscaling algorithm applied to the
   Rohini River Basin, Nepal
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID NORTH-ATLANTIC OSCILLATION; ASIAN SUMMER MONSOON; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   PRECIPITATION; VARIABILITY; FORECASTS; RAINFALL; ENSO; CIRCULATION;
   SCENARIOS
AB Climate change scenarios generated by general circulation models have too coarse a spatial resolution to be useful in planning disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation strategies at regional to river basin scales. This study presents a new non-parametric statistical K-nearest neighbor algorithm for downscaling climate change scenarios for the Rohini River Basin in Nepal. The study is an introduction to the methodology and discusses its strengths and limitations within the context of hindcasting basin precipitation for the period of 1976-2006. The actual downscaled climate change projections are not presented here. In general, we find that this method is quite robust and well suited to the data-poor situations common in developing countries. The method is able to replicate historical rainfall values in most months, except for January, September, and October. As with any downscaling technique, whether numerical or statistical, data limitations significantly constrain model ability. The method was able to confirm that the dataset available for the Rohini Basin does not capture long-term climatology. Yet, we do find that the hindcasts generated with this methodology do have enough skill to warrant pursuit of downscaling climate change scenarios for this particularly poor and vulnerable region of the world.
C1 [Opitz-Stapleton, Sarah] ISET, Boulder, CO 80304 USA.
   [Gangopadhyay, Subhrendu] US Bur Reclamat, Denver Fed Ctr, Denver, CO 80225 USA.
RP Opitz-Stapleton, S (corresponding author), ISET, 948 North St 9, Boulder, CO 80304 USA.
EM staplets@i-s-e-t.org
FU UK Department for International Development (DfID) [OHM0837]; National
   Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) [NA06OAR431008]
FX This research was funded under the UK Department for International
   Development (DfID) grant OHM0837 and the National Oceanic and
   Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) grant NA06OAR431008. We thank two
   anonymous reviewers for their close attention and advice.
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NR 50
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 10
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI WIEN
PA SACHSENPLATZ 4-6, PO BOX 89, A-1201 WIEN, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD MAR
PY 2011
VL 103
IS 3-4
BP 375
EP 386
DI 10.1007/s00704-010-0301-z
PG 12
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 723HZ
UT WOS:000287498700008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cilliers, EJ
   Timmermans, W
   Rohr, H
   Goosen, H
AF Cilliers, Elizelle Juanee
   Timmermans, Wim
   Rohr, Hildegard
   Goosen, Hasse
TI Scaling Up of Nature-Based Solutions to Guide Climate Adaptation
   Planning: Evidence From Two Case Studies
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; climate adaptation; planning; evidence-based;
   context-based
ID INFRASTRUCTURE; CITIES; POLICY
AB Nature-based solutions are gaining importance within the notion of urban sustainability problems and associated global goals. This paper argues that nature-based solutions could guide climate adaptation planning, but it would need to be scaled-up across the globe to have an effective impact on climate adaptation. Literature poses various proposals of how to include nature-based solutions to guide adaptation planning, but practical examples and evidence of such are more limited. This paper addresses this lack by providing examples of two case studies, one in the Netherlands (Amersfoort) and one in South Africa (Lephalale). These two case studies were purposefully selected based on the nature-based approaches they employed in response to climate change challenges. The cases were accordingly considered in terms of their socio-ecological and environmental context, the scale of implementation of the nature-based solutions, the flexibility of these responses employed, and the overall benefits provided through the nature-based approaches. A comparative analysis was conducted between the two cases and highlighted that nature-based approaches could not be limited to a singular ad-hoc approach, but should rather be scaled up and more comprehensive, in order to align with the objectives of climate adaptation planning. The cases evidenced how the broader environment could benefit when nature-based solutions are scaled up to guide climate adaptation.
C1 [Cilliers, Elizelle Juanee; Rohr, Hildegard] North West Univ, Unit Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.
   [Cilliers, Elizelle Juanee] Univ Technol Sydney, Fac Design Architecture & Bldg, Ultimo, NSW, Australia.
   [Timmermans, Wim] Wageningen Univ, Climate Resilience Team, Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Goosen, Hasse] Climate Adaptat Serv, Bussum, Netherlands.
C3 North West University - South Africa; University of Technology Sydney;
   Wageningen University & Research
RP Cilliers, EJ (corresponding author), North West Univ, Unit Environm Sci & Management, Potchefstroom, South Africa.; Cilliers, EJ (corresponding author), Univ Technol Sydney, Fac Design Architecture & Bldg, Ultimo, NSW, Australia.
EM juaneep@gmail.com
RI Cilliers, Juanee/C-4303-2012
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NR 31
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 12
U2 50
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9634
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN CITIES
JI Front. Sustain. Cities
PD APR 12
PY 2022
VL 4
AR 624046
DI 10.3389/frsc.2022.624046
PG 10
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Urban Studies
GA 7T8CI
UT WOS:000911669600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Boafo, J
   Yeboah, T
AF Boafo, James
   Yeboah, Thomas
TI Understanding ecological grief as a response to climate change-induced
   loss in Ghana
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Ecological grief; climate change; mental health; Ghana
ID MENTAL-HEALTH; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; METHODOLOGY; NUNATSIAVUT; FARMERS;
   PLACE; SENSE
AB The perceived effects of climate change on the environment are becoming a lived experience for many rural dwellers in poor countries. Several new concepts have emerged to describe the long-term mental health consequences of climate-induced effects, with ecological grief as a prime example. Yet empirical research showing how climate-related ecological loss drives grief and emotional distress among communities is limited, particularly within the context of sub-Saharan Africa. This study draws on in-depth interviews and a focus group with smallholder farmers in the Upper West region, Ghana's most climate-vulnerable region, to develop an understanding of climate change-induced ecological grief. A key finding of the study is that smallholder farmers in the region are experiencing grief because of climate change-induced ecological loss including loss of livelihoods, loss of indigenous seeds and genetic resources, and loss of indigenous ecological knowledge. We further demonstrate that grief experienced by farmers manifests in various forms including feelings of anxiety, powerlessness, helplessness, hopelessness, and sadness, among others. Our findings have implications for climate change adaptation strategies and policies across the global South.
C1 [Boafo, James] Murdoch Univ, Indo Pacific Res Ctr, Murdoch, WA, Australia.
   [Yeboah, Thomas] Kwame Nkrumah Univ Sci & Technol, Bur Integrated Rural Dev, Kumasi, Ghana.
C3 Murdoch University; Kwame Nkrumah University Science & Technology
RP Boafo, J (corresponding author), Murdoch Univ, Indo Pacific Res Ctr, Murdoch, WA, Australia.
EM jamesknust@gmail.com
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NR 48
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD 2024 SEP 25
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/17565529.2024.2407342
EA SEP 2024
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA G8O0Q
UT WOS:001319153500001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Nonvide, GMA
AF Nonvide, Gbetondji Melaine Armel
TI Exploring combined adaptation strategies to improve crop yield and
   smallholder farmers' welfare
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Climate change; adaptation strategies; yield; smallholder farmers;
   welfare; Maize; O13; Q18; Q54
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGIES; FOOD SECURITY; RICE YIELD;
   IMPACTS; MAIZE; PERCEPTIONS; ADOPTION; POVERTY; RISK
AB This study investigates whether combinations of climate change adaptation strategies are associated with improved yield and smallholder farmers' welfare, using a random sample of 200 maize producers in Benin. It employs an extended regression model to address the selection bias and endogeneity issues. Furthermore, as a robustness check, a multinomial endogenous switching regression model is also estimated. Results indicate that tree planting and the use of improved variety are the single strategies that increase yield. However, when combined with other strategies, the effects decrease for tree planting while increasing for the use of improved variety. With regard to the welfare equation, the only improved variety is the single strategy that increases food expenditure per capita, and the effect increases when combined with other strategies. Overall, the results reveal that the use of improved variety is the single strategy that increases both yield and smallholder farmers' welfare, and combined with other strategies, the effect increases. These findings suggest that the adoption of combined adaptation strategies is important for ensuring smallholder farmers' welfare.
C1 [Nonvide, Gbetondji Melaine Armel] Univ Abomey Calavi, Fac Sci Econ & Gest, Abomey Calavi, Benin.
C3 University of Abomey Calavi
RP Nonvide, GMA (corresponding author), Univ Abomey Calavi, Fac Sci Econ & Gest, Abomey Calavi, Benin.
EM melainearmel@gmail.com
RI Nonvide, Armel/AAI-9129-2020
OI Nonvide, Gbetondji Melaine Armel/0000-0003-2802-1711
CR Al Dirani A, 2021, FOOD SECUR, V13, P1029, DOI 10.1007/s12571-021-01188-2
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NR 50
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 1
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD 2024 JUN 20
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/17565529.2024.2365941
EA JUN 2024
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XM8I4
UT WOS:001262189400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Fidali, KL
   Larder, N
AF Fidali, Kristina L.
   Larder, Nicolette
TI 'We are happy to tell you the <i>sisimol stories</i> (small stories)':
   Reframing what counts as conservation work in the Arnavon Islands,
   Solomon Islands
SO ASIA PACIFIC VIEWPOINT
LA English
DT Article
DE conservation; diverse economies; diverse livelihoods; postcapitalist
   sustainability; Solomon Islands
ID COMMUNITY; GENDER; WOMEN; BIODIVERSITY; EMPOWERMENT; RESILIENCE; LESSONS
AB Funders and governments alike increasingly understand the importance of women's inclusion in environmental conservation and natural resource management across the Pacific region. Despite this recognition, the weight of evidence suggests that entrenched gender inequalities continue to create barriers for women's engagement in conservation management and related projects like those for climate change adaptation. Against the dominant narrative that women are always marginal in environmental management in the Pacific, we draw on the small stories provided by women in communities around the Arnavon Islands in the Solomon Islands to show that in fact women are deeply engaged in conservation efforts and environmental care. Building on the concept of emplaced sustainability, we reframe what counts as the work of environmental conservation to include the mundane, small and everyday activities undertaken by women. Rather than marginal, the collective mundane and everyday work of women takes place alongside the 'important' or 'big' work of conservation in the region and we argue that both kinds of labouring matter for sustaining ecological livelihoods.
C1 [Fidali, Kristina L.; Larder, Nicolette] Univ New England, Human Geog, Armidale, NSW 2350, Australia.
C3 University of New England
RP Larder, N (corresponding author), Univ New England, Human Geog, Armidale, NSW 2350, Australia.
EM nlarder@une.edu.au
OI Larder, Nicolette/0000-0001-8119-4879
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NR 56
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 4
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1360-7456
EI 1467-8373
J9 ASIA PAC VIEWP
JI Asia Pac. Viewp.
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 63
IS 1
SI SI
BP 113
EP 125
DI 10.1111/apv.12325
EA JAN 2022
PG 13
WC Area Studies; Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies; Geography
GA 0F6JF
UT WOS:000745615700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Busch, C
   Wydra, K
AF Busch, Christin
   Wydra, Kerstin
BE Amaducci, S
TI Life Cycle Assessment of an Exemplary Agrivoltaic System in Thuringia
   (Germany)
SO AGRIVOLTAICS WORLD CONFERENCE 2022
SE AgriVoltaics Conference Proceedings
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT AgriVoltaics World Conference
CY JUN 15-17, 2022
CL ELECTR NETWORK
DE Agrivoltaic; Life Cycle Assessment; Environmental Impact
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; AGRICULTURE
AB Agrivoltaic systems create numerous synergies between the aspects of agriculture, climate protection, climate change adaptation, land use and energy. For this reason, the present study examined the environmental impact of this technology using the life cycle assessment approach. Three scenarios were developed: An APV scenario with combined production of electricity and potatoes on one field (scenario 1), a PV scenario with separate production of PV electricity and potatoes (scenario 2) and a scenario in which electricity production is covered by the German electricity mix (scenario 3). All three scenarios showed the same output in energy production (500.13 kWp) and in potato production (307.87 dt/a or 9,236 dt/30 years). The results show that APV systems have similar impacts as open-space PV systems and achieve significantly better performances than the German electricity mix. In half of the impact categories examined, the environmental impacts were caused by potato production, in the other half by electricity production. Due to current developments in system design and solar module development, it can be expected that the life cycle impact of APV systems will continue to improve in the future.
C1 [Busch, Christin; Wydra, Kerstin] Erfurt Univ Appl Sci, Erfurt, Germany.
C3 Fachhochschule Erfurt
RP Busch, C (corresponding author), Erfurt Univ Appl Sci, Erfurt, Germany.
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NR 36
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 3
PU TIB Open Publishing
PI Hannover
PA Welfengarten 1 B, Hannover, GERMANY
J9 AgriVoltaics Conf Pr
PY 2022
VL 1
DI 10.52825/agripv.v1i.537
PG 7
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Energy & Fuels
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics; Energy & Fuels
GA BX6JV
UT WOS:001310227400006
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mashfufah, A
   Nurkamto, J
   Sajidan
   Wiranto
AF Mashfufah, Aynin
   Nurkamto, Joko
   Sajidan
   Wiranto
TI THE EFFECTIVENESS OF INQUIRY LABORATORY-BASED ETHNOSOCIOECOLOGY LEARNING
   MODEL TO EMPOWER ENVIRONMENTAL LITERACY IN PRESERVICE BIOLOGY TEACHERS
SO PERIODICO TCHE QUIMICA
LA English
DT Article
DE cognitive skills; environmental knowledge; environmental literacy;
   ethnosocioecology; inquiry laboratory
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; INDIGENOUS KNOWLEDGE; BEHAVIOR; EXPERIENCES;
   EDUCATION; SYSTEMS; SCIENCE; URBAN
AB The main point of environmental literacy is to increase individual concern towards the ecological crisis in concrete action or environmental care movement. This research aims to empower the knowledge of preservice biology teachers about the environment and its problems in environmental, and social contexts and cognitive skills to investigate and plan solutions to the issues. The quantitative research method with the one-group pretest-posttest design was employed to test the increase of environmental knowledge after learning. The nurturant effect is cognitive skills in overcoming environmental problems. The research participants consisted of 29 preservice biology teachers taking the environmental science course in the first semester. Environmental knowledge was measured using an essay test, while the measurement of cognitive skills was performed using a rubric with a rating scale based on the results of investigations of environmental problems in the field. It was found that the inquiry laboratory-based ethnosocioecology learning model could significantly improve environmental knowledge. In addition, environmental knowledge is positively correlated with cognitive skills. In general, cognitive skills increase with higher environmental knowledge.
C1 [Mashfufah, Aynin] Sebelas Maret Univ, Doctoral Program Educ Sci, Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia.
   [Nurkamto, Joko; Sajidan] Sebelas Maret Univ, Teacher Training & Educ Fac, Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia.
   [Wiranto] Sebelas Maret Univ, Fac Math & Sci, Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia.
C3 Sebelas Maret University; Sebelas Maret University; Sebelas Maret
   University
RP Mashfufah, A (corresponding author), Sebelas Maret Univ, Doctoral Program Educ Sci, Surakarta, Central Java, Indonesia.
EM ayninn@stude.uns.ac.id
OI , Wiranto/0000-0002-9292-3691
FU LPDP
FX Thanks to the BUDI scholarship organized by LPDP. LPDP supports and
   provides research funding.
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NR 76
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU TCHE QUIMICA GROUP
PI PORTO ALEGRE RS
PA 359 ANITA GARIBALDI ST, RM 603, PORTO ALEGRE RS, 90450-001, BRAZIL
SN 1806-0374
EI 2179-0302
J9 PERIOD TCHE QUIM
JI Period. Tche Quim.
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 17
IS 35
BP 877
EP 896
PG 20
WC Chemistry, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Chemistry
GA ML6OU
UT WOS:000549583700074
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kunert, N
AF Kunert, Norbert
TI Preliminary indications for diverging heat and drought sensitivities in
   Norway spruce and Scots pine in Central Europe
SO IFOREST-BIOGEOSCIENCES AND FORESTRY
LA English
DT Article
DE Tree Mortality; Water Stress; Heat Stress; Physiological Limitations;
   Conifers
ID FINE-ROOT BIOMASS; PICEA-ABIES L.; TREE MORTALITY; TOLERANCE; KARST.
AB Massive and increasing tree mortality is currently observed in the two conifer species Norway spruce and Scots pine in Central Europe. Consecutive dry years are made responsible for this phenomenon. Leaf trait measurements, in specific leaf osmotic potential (Pi(osm)) and leaf water potential at turgor loss (Pi(tip)), indicate that the underlying mechanisms for tree mortality are most likely different between the two species. Pi(tip) of spruce was highly negative, revealing a potentially high drought tolerance of the species. Pi(tip) of Scots pine was less negative, suggesting a higher susceptibility to drought stress. I conclude that the mortality of Norway spruce might be caused by rising temperatures and that the summer temperatures in the past years were beyond the species thermal tolerance threshold. Overall, I want to highlight and enhance the discussion that the search for suitable species for a climate change adapted forest should go in both directions, i.e., species should be chosen to make the forest fit for both increasing drought and heat stress.
C1 [Kunert, Norbert] Smithsonian Conservat Biol Inst, Conservat Ecol Ctr, Front Royal, VA 22630 USA.
   [Kunert, Norbert] Smithsonian Trop Res Inst, Forest Global Earth Observ, Ctr Trop Forest Sci, Panama City, Panama.
C3 Smithsonian Institution; Smithsonian National Zoological Park &
   Conservation Biology Institute; Smithsonian Institution; Smithsonian
   Tropical Research Institute
RP Kunert, N (corresponding author), Smithsonian Conservat Biol Inst, Conservat Ecol Ctr, Front Royal, VA 22630 USA.; Kunert, N (corresponding author), Smithsonian Trop Res Inst, Forest Global Earth Observ, Ctr Trop Forest Sci, Panama City, Panama.
EM kunertn@si.edu
RI Kunert, Norbert/G-2861-2012
OI Kunert, Norbert/0000-0002-5602-6221
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NR 18
TC 24
Z9 25
U1 2
U2 21
PU SISEF-SOC ITALIANA SELVICOLTURA ECOL FORESTALE
PI POTENZA
PA DEPT PROD VEGETALE, VIA ATENEO LUCANO 10, POTENZA, 85100, ITALY
SN 1971-7458
J9 IFOREST
JI iForest
PD APR
PY 2020
VL 13
BP 89
EP 91
DI 10.3832/ifor3216-012
PG 3
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA KY7PM
UT WOS:000522765400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Oh, S
   Kim, K
   Kim, H
AF Oh, Seungik
   Kim, Kyeongseok
   Kim, Hyoungkwan
TI Investment decision for coastal urban development projects considering
   the impact of climate change: Case study of the Great Garuda Project in
   Indonesia
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Coastal urban development; Great seawall;
   Real options analysis
ID FLOOD RISK-MANAGEMENT; REAL OPTIONS ANALYSIS; UNCERTAINTY; ADAPTATION;
   VALUATION; BENEFITS
AB As the impact of climate change increases, coastal cities are negatively affected by sea level rise, extreme rainfall, and storm surges. To cope with such climate change impacts, it is essential to invest in climate change adaptation procedures in coastal cities. This paper proposes a rainbow option-based methodology to accurately valuate investments in coastal city development considering climate change. This model is a tool for evaluating the economic feasibility considering the uncertainties of the impacts of climate and urban development projects. The National Capital Integrated Coastal Development (NCICD) project by Indonesian government was used as a case study to validate the effectiveness and applicability of the proposed methodology. The option value of the NCICD project using the proposed model was estimated at US$ 7021 million. The rainbow option, dealing with both climate and market uncertainties, enables decision makers to reasonably assess the value of coastal development projects for their successful execution. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Oh, Seungik; Kim, Kyeongseok; Kim, Hyoungkwan] Yonsei Univ, Sch Civil & Environm Engn, Seoul 03277, South Korea.
C3 Yonsei University
RP Kim, H (corresponding author), Yonsei Univ, Sch Civil & Environm Engn, Seoul 03277, South Korea.
EM ohseungik@yonsei.ac.kr; kim.ks@yonsei.ac.kr; hyoungkwan@yonsei.ac.kr
FU Infrastructure and transportation technology promotion research Program
   - Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (MOLIT) of Korean
   government [17CTAP-C133290-01]
FX This research was supported by grants (17CTAP-C133290-01) from
   Infrastructure and transportation technology promotion research Program
   funded by Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport (MOLIT) of
   Korean government.
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NR 45
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 2
U2 25
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD MAR 20
PY 2018
VL 178
BP 507
EP 514
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.12.283
PG 8
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA FW8DR
UT WOS:000425558600046
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Grigorescu, I
   Geacu, S
AF Grigorescu, Ines
   Geacu, Sorin
TI The dynamics and conservation of forest ecosystems in Bucharest
   Metropolitan Area
SO URBAN FORESTRY & URBAN GREENING
LA English
DT Article
DE Forest ecosystems; Forest dynamics; Conservation; Bucharest Metropolitan
   Area; Romania
ID URBAN GREEN-SPACE; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LAND-USE; INFRASTRUCTURE;
   CITIES; ROMANIA; HEALTH; DENSIFICATION; RESTITUTION; VEGETATION
AB Over the recent years, metropolitan regions dealt with the growing problems of urban growth, land use/land cover changes, landscape fragmentation, deforestation and loss of natural vegetation. By its position in the Romanian Plain (southern Romania), Bucharest Metropolitan Area faced significant land transformations over the past centuries due its favourable natural, socio-political and economic conditions which shaped the prerequisites for intensive/extensive agriculture, urbanization and industrialization. The paper is aiming to provide an insight on the temporal and spatial evolution of forest ecosystems based on several statistical and spatial data issued from historical documents and cartographical materials covering the past over two hundred years: 1790-1912 (empirical approach); 1912-1990 and 1990-2014 (spatial and statistical analysis). The outcomes revealed significant forest withdrawal over the analysed intervals in relation to the main triggering driving factors (e.g. historical, political, economic). Moreover, the study is completed with valuable information on the biogeographical and ecosystem classification of forests in the study-area, as well as the conservation of forest ecosystems though natural protected areas.
C1 [Grigorescu, Ines; Geacu, Sorin] Romanian Acad, Inst Geog, 12 D Racovita St,Sect 2, Bucharest 023993, Romania.
C3 Romanian Academy; Institute of Geography of Romanian Academy
RP Grigorescu, I (corresponding author), Romanian Acad, Inst Geog, 12 D Racovita St,Sect 2, Bucharest 023993, Romania.
EM inesgrigorescu@yahoo.com
RI Grigorescu, Ines/B-1759-2010
OI Grigorescu, Ines/0000-0003-1826-5915
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NR 55
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER GMBH
PI MUNICH
PA HACKERBRUCKE 6, 80335 MUNICH, GERMANY
SN 1618-8667
EI 1610-8167
J9 URBAN FOR URBAN GREE
JI Urban For. Urban Green.
PD OCT
PY 2017
VL 27
BP 90
EP 99
DI 10.1016/j.ufug.2017.04.012
PG 10
WC Plant Sciences; Environmental Studies; Forestry; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Plant Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Forestry; Urban
   Studies
GA FQ6JK
UT WOS:000418470600012
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Kim, Y
   Eisenberg, D
   Bondank, E
   Chester, M
   Mascaro, G
   Underwood, S
AF Kim, Yeowon
   Eisenberg, Daniel
   Bondank, Emily
   Chester, Mikhail
   Mascaro, Giuseppe
   Underwood, Shane
BE Soibelman, L
   PenaMora, F
TI Safe-to-Fail Climate Change Adaptation Strategies for Phoenix Roadways
   under Extreme Precipitation
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE INFRASTRUCTURE 2017: POLICY,
   FINANCE, AND EDUCATION
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on Sustainable Infrastructure - Policy,
   Finance, and Education
CY OCT 26-28, 2017
CL New York, NY
SP Amer Soc Civil Engineers, Comm Sustainabil
ID RISK
AB Built infrastructure continues to become more vulnerable to failure due to shifting temperature and precipitation extremes associated with global climate change. Current infrastructure design practices require risk analysis to predict a range of weather events in which built systems endure any possible failure-or "fail-safe" design. However, if the system receives a shock that is not foreseen with the historical data, it may lead to a shutdown of the entire system and thus cause unmanageable and cascading failures. Instead, "safe-to-fail" design takes into account uncertain future threats by privileging infrastructure solutions that do not compromise the entire urban system upon failure. In this study, we link climate and urban drainage models to predict future roadway vulnerability using the EPA storm water management model (SWMM) and propose a framework for "safe-to-fail" infrastructure adaptation strategy using multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA). We demonstrate the practicality of this framework for future flooding events in Phoenix, Arizona. Taken together, our new infrastructure design framework is important for managing future extreme weather events by taking into account "safe-to-fail" decision factors neglected in traditional "fail-safe" design.
C1 [Kim, Yeowon] Arizona State Univ, Sch Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA.
   [Eisenberg, Daniel; Bondank, Emily; Chester, Mikhail; Mascaro, Giuseppe; Underwood, Shane] Arizona State Univ, Sch Sustainable Engn & Built Environm, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA.
C3 Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe; Arizona State
   University; Arizona State University-Tempe
RP Kim, Y (corresponding author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA.
EM yeowon.kim@asu.edu
RI Eisenberg, Daniel/R-7488-2019; Mascaro, Giuseppe/K-5504-2013
OI Mascaro, Giuseppe/0000-0003-4516-1206; Underwood,
   Benjamin/0000-0002-7223-3968
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NR 21
TC 2
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 7
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
BN 978-0-7844-8120-2
PY 2017
BP 348
EP 353
PG 6
WC Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Engineering, Civil; Urban Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Engineering; Urban Studies
GA BJ7JX
UT WOS:000427389600033
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Millison, D
   Countryman, S
AF Millison, Dan
   Countryman, Scott
BE Soibelman, L
   PenaMora, F
TI Sustainable Pre-Stressed Concrete from Seawater
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON SUSTAINABLE INFRASTRUCTURE 2017: TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Conference on Sustainable Infrastructure
CY OCT 26-28, 2017
CL New York, NY
SP Amer Soc Civil Engineers, Comm Sustainabil
ID GREAT-BARRIER-REEF; CORAL-REEFS; OCEAN ACIDIFICATION; ARTIFICIAL REEFS;
   DIVING TOURISM; CLIMATE-CHANGE; MANAGEMENT; CARBON; TRANSPLANTATION;
   ZOOXANTHELLAE
AB A process for electrolytic deposition of calcium carbonate (CaCO3) from seawater was pioneered by Wolf Hilbertz in the late 1970s, whose original idea was to make sustainable building materials from seawater. The process was inspired by and is derived from cathodic protection systems used on offshore oil and gas platforms. While the basic science is well understood, most applications have been for artificial reefs. It appears that there has been no systematic attempt anywhere in the world to develop a commercial system for sustainable building materials.
   This is one of the only technological prospects for sustainable building materials production which is in effect infinitely scalable: the possibilities are limited only by our imaginations. The design concept is replicable and scalable in tropical waters throughout the world. It is one of the only viable approaches to making sustainable building materials at scale which also yields multiple marine biodiversity and climate change adaptation benefits. Based on current market prices for limestone and limestone based construction materials, commercial production appears to be viable at the higher price range. It is time to revive Hilbertz's original idea and make it work.
C1 [Millison, Dan] Transcendergy LLC, 108 Montague Circle, Williamsburg, VA 23185 USA.
   [Countryman, Scott] Coral Triangle Conservancy, Net Cube Ctr, 14th Floor,3rd Ave Corner 30th St, Bonifacio Global City, Taguig, Philippines.
RP Millison, D (corresponding author), Transcendergy LLC, 108 Montague Circle, Williamsburg, VA 23185 USA.
EM danmillison@gmail.com; scott@ree.ph
CR Abelson A, 2006, B MAR SCI, V78, P151
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NR 49
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 5
PU AMER SOC CIVIL ENGINEERS
PI NEW YORK
PA UNITED ENGINEERING CENTER, 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017-2398 USA
BN 978-0-7844-8121-9
PY 2017
BP 361
EP 372
PG 12
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering
GA BJ1AZ
UT WOS:000417353400032
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Castellanos-Acuña, D
   Sáenz-Romero, C
   Lindig-Cisneros, RA
   Sánchez-Vargas, NM
   Lobbit, P
   Montero-Castro, JC
AF Castellanos-Acuna, Dante
   Saenz-Romero, Cuauhtemoc
   Lindig-Cisneros, Roberto A.
   Sanchez-Vargas, Nahum M.
   Lobbit, Phillipe
   Carlos Montero-Castro, Juan
TI ALTITUDINAL VARIATION AMONG SPECIES AND PROVENANCE OF <i>Pinus
   pseudostrobus</i>, <i>P</i>. <i>devoniana</i> and <i>P</i>.
   <i>leiophylla</i>. NURSERY TEST
SO REVISTA CHAPINGO SERIE CIENCIAS FORESTALES Y DEL AMBIENTE
LA English
DT Article
DE Genetic variation; assisted migration; Nuevo San Juan Parangaricutiro
ID GENETIC-VARIATION; PATULA POPULATIONS; FROST DAMAGE; GROWTH; MEXICO;
   MICHOACAN; CLIMATE; PHENOLOGY; DROUGHT
AB pine-oak forests of San Juan Nuevo, Michoacan are dominated by Pinus pseudostrobus, P. devoniana and P. leiophylla. The patterns of genetic variation of these species are poorly known, particularly those of P leiophylla, limiting the creation of guidelines for the movement of seeds and seedlings for reforestation and climate change adaptation. Species were collected in four or five provenances along an altitudinal transect (1,650 to 2,500 m) for the establishment of a nursery trial, with the aim of quantifying the genetic variation among and within species. Plant height (three and five months) was significantly different (P < 0.0001) among species. Significant differences among provenances for P. devoniana (P < 0.0001) and P. leiophylla (P = 0.0352) were observed. The species P. devoniana showed a pronounced growth pattern associated with altitude of origin, where the fastest growing plants came from a lower elevation. The populations of P leiophylla were different only at three months of age, with no statistically significant altitudinal pattern. No significant differences were found among populations of R pseudostrobus.
C1 [Castellanos-Acuna, Dante; Saenz-Romero, Cuauhtemoc; Sanchez-Vargas, Nahum M.; Lobbit, Phillipe] Univ Michoacana, IIAF, Tarimbaro 58880, Michoacan, Mexico.
   [Lindig-Cisneros, Roberto A.] Univ Nacl Autonoma Mexico, Ctr Invest Ecosistemas CIEco, Lab Ecol Restaurac, Morelia 58091, Michoacan, Mexico.
   [Carlos Montero-Castro, Juan] Univ Michoacana, Fac Biol, Morelia 58040, Michoacan, Mexico.
C3 Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo; Universidad Nacional
   Autonoma de Mexico; Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolas de Hidalgo
RP Sáenz-Romero, C (corresponding author), Univ Michoacana, IIAF, Km 9-5 Carretera Morelia Zinapecuaro, Tarimbaro 58880, Michoacan, Mexico.
EM csaenzromero@gmail.com
FU Fondo Mixto CONACYT-Michoacan Coordinacion de la Investigacion
   Cientifica de la UMSNH [2009-127128]; PAPIT, UNAM [IN202112]
FX We thank the funding granted by the Fondo Mixto CONACYT-Michoacan
   (2009-127128) Coordinacion de la Investigacion Cientifica de la UMSNH
   and the program PAPIT (IN202112) of UNAM. We thank for the facilities
   provided by the Forest Management Office of the Indigenous Community of
   Nuevo San Juan Parangaricutiro for seed collection, through Felipe
   Aguilar, Manuel Echevarria, Antonio Echevarria, Felipe Lopez and Reyes
   Aguilar, and for helping in the maintenance of nursery trial of Mariela
   Gomez, CIEco-UNAM.
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   [No title captured]
NR 35
TC 14
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 5
PU UNIV AUTONOMA CHAPINGO
PI CHAPINGO, EDO DE MEXICO
PA CUBICULO 113, CHAPINGO, EDO DE MEXICO, 56230, MEXICO
SN 2007-3828
EI 2007-4018
J9 REV CHAPINGO SER CIE
JI Rev. Chapingo Ser. Cienc. For. Am.
PD SEP-DEC
PY 2013
VL 19
IS 3
BP 399
EP 411
DI 10.5154/r.rchscfa.2013.01.002
PG 13
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 278EK
UT WOS:000328871800008
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hansen, HS
AF Hansen, Henning Sten
TI Modelling the future coastal zone urban development as implied by the
   IPCC SRES and assessing the impact from sea level rise
SO LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Land-use modelling; Spatial planning;
   Flooding; Cellular automata
ID CELLULAR-AUTOMATON MODEL; LAND-USE; CHANGE SCENARIOS; SAN-FRANCISCO;
   SIMULATION
AB During the last decennium climate change has received much attention and especially various mitigation and adaptation strategies have gained political awareness. Particularly the coastal zone will be affected by derived consequences like sea level rise, increased storminess and flooding. In order to mitigate the most severe consequences for the society it is decisive that urban and regional planners address the climate change issue in their planning efforts. Using modelling and simulation, we can increase our understanding of the future land-use system under influence of a changing climate and accordingly reduce uncertainty concerning decisions. The current paper describes how to carry out land-use simulations as envisaged by the SRES narratives using a multi-criteria land-use modelling framework. Combined with expected future flooding due to sea level rise we perform an impact assessment on future urban development. Finally, we describe how the definition of adaptation strategies can facilitate spatial planning measures to counteract the consequences of potential climate changes. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 Aalborg Univ, Dept Dev & Planning, DK-2750 Ballerup, Denmark.
C3 Aalborg University
RP Hansen, HS (corresponding author), Aalborg Univ, Dept Dev & Planning, Lautrupvang 2B, DK-2750 Ballerup, Denmark.
EM hsh@land.aau.dk
CR [Anonymous], 7 EEA
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NR 34
TC 67
Z9 73
U1 1
U2 61
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0169-2046
EI 1872-6062
J9 LANDSCAPE URBAN PLAN
JI Landsc. Urban Plan.
PD DEC
PY 2010
VL 98
IS 3-4
SI SI
BP 141
EP 149
DI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2010.08.018
PG 9
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies; Geography; Geography, Physical; Regional
   & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Physical Geography; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA 690AV
UT WOS:000284973400002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Custer, NA
   Schwinning, S
   DeFalco, LA
   Esque, TC
AF Custer, Nathan A.
   Schwinning, Susanne
   DeFalco, Lesley A.
   Esque, Todd C.
TI Local climate adaptations in two ubiquitous Mojave Desert shrub species,
   Ambrosia dumosa and Larrea tridentata
SO JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; ecological restoration; fast-slow spectrum;
   phenological plasticity; reciprocal transplant experiment; reproductive
   trade-off; winter precipitation gradient
ID WATER-USE EFFICIENCY; GREAT-BASIN; REPRODUCTIVE ALLOCATION;
   POPULATION-DYNAMICS; HYMENOCLEA-SALSOLA; GAS-EXCHANGE; TRADE-OFFS;
   GROWTH; PLANTS; TRAITS
AB Widely distributed species are often locally adapted to climate gradients across their ranges. But little is known about the patterns of intraspecific adaptation in desert shrubs. We examined the questions of local adaptation in multiple populations of two common shrub species of the winter-wet Mojave Desert in North America in a multiple common garden experiment. Plants were raised in the greenhouse and transplanted at the age of 1 year. Ambrosia dumosa is a drought-deciduous low shrub and Larrea tridentata is an exceptionally long-lived evergreen. Over 4 years, we monitored growth, survivorship, leaf and reproductive cover and once measured leaf N content, delta C-13 and SLA. We hypothesized that populations of both species would be differentiated along a growth-survivorship trade-off according to homesite aridity. Both species exhibited previously undocumented population differences along gradients of winter precipitation and temperature. In general, populations from more winter-mesic regions had faster growth in more mesic gardens and lower survivorship in the most arid garden. Homesites with more variable summer precipitation had greater growth for A. dumosa populations, but lower growth for L. tridentata. Among L. tridentata populations, leaf cover correlated positively with growth and negatively with survival time. For A. dumosa populations, growth and survival could not be attributed to specific traits across gardens. However, larger transplants had generally lower growth rates and higher survival rates across gardens, except in the driest garden, where the population averages of intrinsic water use efficiency (iWUE) and stem growth rate were positively correlated. Synthesis. Two dominant species of the Mojave Desert adapted locally to variation in winter and summer precipitation and temperature. They did so in different ways, suggesting that L. tridentata mitigated the risk of hydraulic failure, while A. dumosa optimized carbon assimilation for growth.
C1 [Custer, Nathan A.; Schwinning, Susanne] Texas State Univ, Biol Dept, San Marcos, TX 78666 USA.
   [DeFalco, Lesley A.; Esque, Todd C.] USGS Western Ecol Res Ctr, Henderson, NV USA.
C3 Texas State University System; Texas State University San Marcos; United
   States Department of the Interior; United States Geological Survey
RP Schwinning, S (corresponding author), Texas State Univ, Biol Dept, San Marcos, TX 78666 USA.
EM schwinn@txstate.edu
RI Schwinning, Susanne/G-6412-2015
OI Schwinning, Susanne/0000-0002-9740-0291
FU U.S. Department of Defense
FX U.S. Department of Defense
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NR 89
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 3
U2 44
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0022-0477
EI 1365-2745
J9 J ECOL
JI J. Ecol.
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 110
IS 5
BP 1072
EP 1089
DI 10.1111/1365-2745.13747
EA OCT 2021
PG 18
WC Plant Sciences; Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Plant Sciences; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 1B6TF
UT WOS:000707927400001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Revanth, R
   Sofia, DS
   Abraham, A
   Flower, FXLL
AF Revanth, R.
   Sofia, D. Snowlin
   Abraham, Ancy
   Flower, F. X. Lovelina Little
TI A review on social work and climate change: the need for a
   transdisciplinary approach
SO JOURNAL OF SOCIAL WORK PRACTICE
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Climate change; social and economic impacts; transdisciplinary approach;
   social work; adaptation and mitigation strategies
ID ADAPTATION; INTEGRATION; INSIGHTS; POLICY
AB Climate change is a global emergency due to its social and economic impacts. This comprehensive review examines how climate change affects society and emphasises the role of social work in solving this problem with a multidisciplinary approach. Despite the least responsible, marginalised groups suffer hugely from climate change impacts and the global GDP will plummet, if no action is taken to mitigate its effects causing severe economic hardship for developing nations, and marginalised communities, which already face inequalities, resource shortages, and poor governance. There is a necessity for strategies to lower vulnerable population risks, thus emphasising the role of social work in addressing the inequalities of the climate change impacts. This paper discusses how social work concepts relate to environmental challenges and how they advocate for sustainability during climate change adaptation and mitigation, and promote environmental justice. Furthermore, the review also emphasises the need for transdisciplinary action on climate change. Scopus and Google Scholar databases was used to retrieve literature, based on the review questions, 51 literature items were selected for the evaluation and case examples. The review concludes that transdisciplinary action, including social workers' role in decision-making and implementation, can create an equitable climate change mitigation plan.
C1 [Revanth, R.; Flower, F. X. Lovelina Little] Bharathiar Univ, Dept Social Work, Coimbatore, India.
   [Sofia, D. Snowlin] Dr Agarwals Eye Hosp, Operat & Adm Dept, Coimbatore, India.
   [Abraham, Ancy] PSG Coll Arts & Sci, Dept Social Work, Coimbatore, India.
C3 Bharathiar University; PSG College of Arts & Science
RP Revanth, R (corresponding author), Bharathiar Univ, Dept Social Work, Coimbatore, India.
EM revanthbuscholar1@gmail.com
OI R, Revanth/0000-0003-4998-8315
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NR 52
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0265-0533
EI 1465-3885
J9 J SOC WORK PRACT
JI J. Soc. Work Pract.
PD 2024 OCT 10
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/02650533.2024.2411048
EA OCT 2024
PG 15
WC Social Work
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Social Work
GA I3R8P
UT WOS:001329471500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pröbstl-Haider, U
   Wanner, A
   Feilhammer, M
   Mostegl, N
   Dabrowska, K
AF Proebstl-Haider, Ulrike
   Wanner, Alice
   Feilhammer, Magdalena
   Mostegl, Nina
   Dabrowska, Kornelia
TI The right fit: Acceptance of nature-based solutions across European
   cities
SO LANDSCAPE AND URBAN PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Nature-based solutions; Choice experiment; Climate change adaptation;
   European cities
ID CHOICE-EXPERIMENTS
AB European cities consistently seek to improve urban environments for their residents, yet often struggle to find solutions to address urban issues while engaging citizens. The European Union funds research and innovation projects proposing nature-based solutions to address climate change, biodiversity, human health and wellbeing in cities under the Horizon 2020 and Horizon Europe programs. The presented research from the project UPSURGE is based on a survey of 5,990 urban residents in 6 European countries. The study focuses on the planning phase of nature-based solutions in cities, in which trade-offs have to be made between different options, such as the design, effectiveness, financial contributions from residents or participatory options. Based on an innovative survey including a choice experiment, the aim is to assist public participation processes in various countries, help planning teams define priorities and design governance measures which ensure long-term dedication to development plans. The results reflect respective exposure to climate change across the continent; such as Greek respondents being more affected by high temperatures compared to those from the United Kingdom. However, the study also revealed different preferences in regard to a participatory planning process, willingness to pay and importance of biodiversity.
C1 [Proebstl-Haider, Ulrike; Wanner, Alice; Feilhammer, Magdalena] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, Vienna, Austria.
   [Mostegl, Nina] Salzburger Inst Raumordnung & Wohnen, Salzburg, Austria.
C3 BOKU University
RP Wanner, A (corresponding author), Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, Vienna, Austria.
EM ulrike.proebstl@boku.ac.at; alice.wanner@boku.ac.at;
   magdalena.feilhammer@boku.ac.at; nina.mostegl@salzburg.gv.at
RI Wanner, Alice/AAZ-6536-2020
OI Wanner, Alice/0000-0001-8175-4370
FU European Union [101003818]
FX The project UPSURGE has received funding from the European Union's
   Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement No.
   101003818.
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NR 63
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 18
U2 18
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0169-2046
EI 1872-6062
J9 LANDSCAPE URBAN PLAN
JI Landsc. Urban Plan.
PD DEC
PY 2024
VL 252
AR 105189
DI 10.1016/j.landurbplan.2024.105189
EA AUG 2024
PG 13
WC Ecology; Environmental Studies; Geography; Geography, Physical; Regional
   & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Physical Geography; Public
   Administration; Urban Studies
GA E2D0H
UT WOS:001301147900001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU el Kadi, MA
   Bouchaou, L
   Castelli, G
   Re, V
   Çakmakçi, Y
   Bresci, E
   Hssaissone, M
AF el Kadi, Moussa Ait
   Bouchaou, Lhoussaine
   Castelli, Giulio
   Re, Viviana
   Cakmakci, Yusuf
   Bresci, Elena
   Hssaissone, Mohammed
TI Multi-aspect assessment of operational fog collection systems: A rural
   development perspective, insights from the Sidi Ifni project in Morocco
SO JOURNAL OF ARID ENVIRONMENTS
LA English
DT Article
DE Fog harvesting; Drinking water; Project assessment; Water quality; Rural
   development
ID WATER COLLECTION; DRINKING-WATER; GROUNDWATER; AQUIFER; REGION; DEW
AB Ongoing climate change and anthropogenic impacts will continue to worsen the problem of water crisis. In order to explore practical solutions for drought and climate change adaptation, this work uses a set of different methodologies to evaluate an operational fog collection project and discuss solutions for some emerging challenges. This study uses fog collection rate, Water Quality Index (WQI) and interviews with the community as indicators for the assessment. Results indicate that the project continues to deliver improved drinking water access to the community. Fog harvesting rate yielded an annual average from 1.6 to 6 L/m 2 /d. Interviews confirm the social commitment of the local community. However, challenging points emerge: (1) ongoing groundwater pollution due to the lack of sanitation; (2) if fog water is the only source, inconsistent fog yields may negatively impact water availability; (3) poor solid waste management. The findings represent a baseline for assessing and benchmarking other similar projects or project proposals in the Atlantic coast of North Africa. Therefore, the proposed methodology can also be used in other fog collection projects around the world.
C1 [el Kadi, Moussa Ait; Bouchaou, Lhoussaine; Hssaissone, Mohammed] Ibn Zohr Univ, Lab Appl Geol & Geoenvironm, Agadir 80035, Morocco.
   [Bouchaou, Lhoussaine; Hssaissone, Mohammed] Mohammed VI Polytech Univ UM6P, Int Water Res Inst, Ben Guerir 43150, Morocco.
   [Castelli, Giulio; Bresci, Elena] Univ Florence, Dept Agr Food Environm & Forestry DAGRI, Florence, Italy.
   [Castelli, Giulio] Univ Geneva, UNESCO Chair Hydropolit, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Castelli, Giulio] Univ Geneva, Environm Governance & Terr Dev Hub GEDT, Geneva, Switzerland.
   [Re, Viviana] Univ Pisa, Dept Earth Sci, Via S Maria 53, I-56126 Pisa, Italy.
   [Cakmakci, Yusuf] Tekirdag Namik Kemal Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Econ, TR-59000 Tekirdag, Turkiye.
   [Hssaissone, Mohammed] Ibn Zohr Univ, Fac Appl Sci, Ait Melloul 86153, Morocco.
C3 Ibn Zohr University of Agadir; Mohammed VI Polytechnic University;
   University of Florence; University of Geneva; University of Geneva;
   University of Pisa; Namik Kemal University; Ibn Zohr University of
   Agadir
RP el Kadi, MA (corresponding author), Ibn Zohr Univ, Lab Appl Geol & Geoenvironm, Agadir 80035, Morocco.
EM moussa.aitelkadi@edu.uiz.ac.ma
RI Bresci, Elena/F-3681-2017; Re, Viviana/O-1540-2019; Çakmakçı,
   Yusuf/HGA-3800-2022; Castelli, Giulio/O-2592-2018
OI Castelli, Giulio/0000-0002-0209-0869; Ait el kadi,
   Moussa/0009-0001-3260-8358
FU APRD research program-GEANTech project; MESRSI in the framework of PRIMA
   programme (EU); MESRSI
FX We would like to thank the Moroccan Ministry of Higher Education,
   Scientific Research and Innovation and the OCP Foundation which funded
   this work through the APRD research program-GEANTech project. We also
   thank the representation of IRD in Morocco for their support and
   AgreeMed project funded by MESRSI in the framework of PRIMA programme
   (EU) . This paper presents part of the outputs of the MedAgriFood
   Resilience project funded by MESRSI through the partners of the Joint
   Call of the Cofund ERA-NETs SUSFOOD2 and FOSC. This research was carried
   out with the full knowledge and support of Dar Si Hmad. Dar Si Hmad is,
   however, not responsible for the results which only depend on the
   authors.
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 1
PU ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI LONDON
PA 24-28 OVAL RD, LONDON NW1 7DX, ENGLAND
SN 0140-1963
EI 1095-922X
J9 J ARID ENVIRON
JI J. Arid. Environ.
PD JUN
PY 2024
VL 222
AR 105174
DI 10.1016/j.jaridenv.2024.105174
EA APR 2024
PG 11
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA SR6Q5
UT WOS:001236220800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hoyer, D
   Bennett, JS
   Reddish, J
   Holder, S
   Howard, R
   Benam, M
   Levine, J
   Ludlow, F
   Feinman, G
   Turchin, P
AF Hoyer, Daniel
   Bennett, James S.
   Reddish, Jenny
   Holder, Samantha
   Howard, Robert
   Benam, Majid
   Levine, Jill
   Ludlow, Francis
   Feinman, Gary
   Turchin, Peter
TI Navigating polycrisis: long-run socio-cultural factors shape response to
   changing climate
SO PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE polycrisis; global history; societal crisis; collective action;
   cliodynamics; Seshat
ID COLLECTIVE ACTION; EVOLUTION
AB Climate variability and natural hazards like floods and earthquakes can act as environmental shocks or socioecological stressors leading to instability and suffering throughout human history. Yet, societies experience a wide range of outcomes when facing such challenges: some suffer from social unrest, civil violence or complete collapse; others prove more resilient and maintain key social functions. We currently lack a clear, generally agreed-upon conceptual framework and evidentiary base to explore what causes these divergent outcomes. Here, we discuss efforts to develop such a framework through the Crisis Database (CrisisDB) programme. We illustrate that the impact of environmental stressors is mediated through extant cultural, political and economic structures that evolve over extended timescales (decades to centuries). These structures can generate high resilience to major shocks, facilitate positive adaptation, or, alternatively, undermine collective action and lead to unrest, violence and even societal collapse. By exposing the ways that different societies have reacted to crises over their lifetime, this framework can help identify the factors and complex social-ecological interactions that either bolster or undermine resilience to contemporary climate shocks.This article is part of the theme issue 'Climate change adaptation needs a science of culture'.
C1 [Hoyer, Daniel; Bennett, James S.; Reddish, Jenny; Benam, Majid; Turchin, Peter] Complex Sci Hub, A-1080 Vienna, Austria.
   [Hoyer, Daniel; Holder, Samantha; Howard, Robert; Levine, Jill] Evolut Inst, San Antonio, FL 33576 USA.
   [Bennett, James S.] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA.
   [Ludlow, Francis] Trinity Coll Dublin, Dublin D02 PN40, Ireland.
   [Feinman, Gary] Field Museum Nat Hist, Chicago, IL 60605 USA.
C3 University of Washington; University of Washington Seattle; Trinity
   College Dublin; Field Museum of Natural History (Chicago)
RP Hoyer, D (corresponding author), Complex Sci Hub, A-1080 Vienna, Austria.; Hoyer, D (corresponding author), Evolut Inst, San Antonio, FL 33576 USA.
EM dhoyer@evolution-institute.org
RI Ludlow, Francis/KIJ-3679-2024; Howard, Robert/E-4890-2010; Hoyer,
   Daniel/AAW-1329-2021
OI Bennett, James S./0000-0003-3051-1672
FU The authors thank Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Andrey Korotayev, Vadim
   Vustiuzhanin and Alan Covey for their generous support offering insight
   on the CrisisDB project and severity of crisis consequences data.
FX The authors thank Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, Andrey Korotayev, Vadim
   Vustiuzhanin and Alan Covey for their generous support offering insight
   on the CrisisDB project and severity of crisis consequences data.
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NR 56
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 18
PU ROYAL SOC
PI LONDON
PA 6-9 CARLTON HOUSE TERRACE, LONDON SW1Y 5AG, ENGLAND
SN 0962-8436
EI 1471-2970
J9 PHILOS T R SOC B
JI Philos. Trans. R. Soc. B-Biol. Sci.
PD NOV 6
PY 2023
VL 378
IS 1889
AR 20220402
DI 10.1098/rstb.2022.0402
PG 11
WC Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics
GA S0SY8
UT WOS:001068365900003
PM 37718603
OA Green Submitted, hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adade, R
   Jaiye, D
   Klutse, NAB
   Okhimamhe, AA
AF Adade, Richard
   Jaiye, Dukiya
   Klutse, Nana Ama Browne
   Okhimamhe, Appollonia Aimiosino
TI Adapting to Changing Climate: Understanding Coastal Rural Residents'
   Relocation Intention in Response to Sea Level Rise
SO CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Ghana; sea level rise; coastal rural community; climate change
   adaptation; relocation; perceived risk
ID PERCEPTION; ADAPTATION; HAZARDS; EXPERIENCE; HOUSEHOLDS; BEHAVIOR;
   FARMERS
AB Ex situ adaptation in the form of relocation has become inevitable in some low-lying coastal zones where other adaptation strategies become impractical or uneconomical. Although relocation of coastal low-lying communities is anticipated globally, little is still known about the factors that influence household-level adoption. This study draws on an extended version of Protection Motivation Theory (PMT) to assess the factors influencing the relocation intention of three highly vulnerable coastal rural communities in Ghana. A total of 359 household heads were randomly selected for a questionnaire survey. The study employed binary logistic regression to identify key factors that influence residents' readiness to relocate. The results indicated that cognitive and compositional factors were more important than contextual factors in explaining the intention to relocate among coastal rural communities in Ghana. However, contextual factors mediated or attenuated the influence of cognitive and compositional factors on relocation intention. Based on the findings, this study advocates for intensive education on the effects of future sea-level rise impacts on communities as well as structural and non-structural measures to improve the socio-economic capacity of rural communities.
C1 [Adade, Richard; Okhimamhe, Appollonia Aimiosino] Fed Univ Technol Minna, Sch Phys Sci, WASCAL Doctoral Res Programme Climate Change & Hum, Minna PMB 65, Niger, Nigeria.
   [Adade, Richard] Univ Cape Coast, Ctr Coastal Management, African Ctr Excellence Coastal Resilience, Cape Coast, Ghana.
   [Jaiye, Dukiya] Fed Univ Technol Minna, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Minna PMB 65, Niger, Nigeria.
   [Klutse, Nana Ama Browne] Univ Ghana, Dept Phys, Accra, Ghana.
   [Okhimamhe, Appollonia Aimiosino] Fed Univ Technol Minna, Dept Geog, Minna PMB 65, Niger, Nigeria.
C3 University of Cape Coast; University of Ghana
RP Adade, R (corresponding author), Fed Univ Technol Minna, Sch Phys Sci, WASCAL Doctoral Res Programme Climate Change & Hum, Minna PMB 65, Niger, Nigeria.; Adade, R (corresponding author), Univ Cape Coast, Ctr Coastal Management, African Ctr Excellence Coastal Resilience, Cape Coast, Ghana.
EM richard.adade@ucc.edu.gh; nklutse@ug.edu.gh
OI Adade, Richard/0000-0003-4832-4269; Klutse, Nana Ama
   Browne/0000-0001-5156-2765
FU German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) through the
   West African Science Service Center on Climate Change and Adapted Land
   Use (WASCAL); Africa Centre of Excellence in Coastal Resilience
   (ACECoR), University of Cape Coast [6389-G]
FX This study is part of PhD research funded by the German Federal Ministry
   of Education and Research (BMBF) through the West African Science
   Service Center on Climate Change and Adapted Land Use (WASCAL). The APC
   was funded by the Africa Centre of Excellence in Coastal Resilience
   (ACECoR), University of Cape Coast (Grant Number 6389-G).
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NR 52
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 4
U2 9
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2225-1154
J9 CLIMATE
JI Climate
PD MAY 18
PY 2023
VL 11
IS 5
AR 110
DI 10.3390/cli11050110
PG 18
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA H7SJ9
UT WOS:000997914200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cornejo, SM
   Niewöhner, J
AF Cornejo P., Sascha M.
   Niewoehner, Joerg
TI How Central Water Management Impacts Local Livelihoods: An Ethnographic
   Case Study of Mining Water Extraction in Tarapaca, Chile
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE environmental conflicts; local knowledge; hydro-social territories;
   neoliberalism; hydrological modeling; Chilean water code; Atacama Desert
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; POLITICAL ECOLOGY; POWER; NEOLIBERALISM;
   CRITIQUE; SCIENCE; POLICY; SALAR; MODEL
AB Chile's neoliberal central water management gives shape to a series of conflicts arising from diverse understandings and ways of life linked to water. This article addresses the question of who is responsible for the ecological costs regarding water use of mining activity in the north of Chile. From the perspective of hydro-social territories, we analyze how the local population in Tarapaca is acting on unequal footing regarding environmental information and knowledge. Local and practical experiences are devalued against technical and scientific modeling, supported by legal and political definitions of "the environment" and "water". Focusing on diverse local narratives, we show how the local population feels threatened by the environmental impacts of mining activity but struggles to find legitimate ways of articulating those anxieties to gain a sense of agency. We conclude that the local ecological consequences of extractivism in this region can only be understood in the context of the wider legal and economic framework regulating the appropriation of water as a resource and that long-term efforts in more participatory sociohydrological modeling might help to broaden the knowledge base for contested decision-making.
C1 [Cornejo P., Sascha M.; Niewoehner, Joerg] Humboldt Univ, IRI THESys, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.
   [Cornejo P., Sascha M.; Niewoehner, Joerg] Humboldt Univ, Inst European Ethnol, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.
C3 Humboldt University of Berlin; Humboldt University of Berlin
RP Cornejo, SM; Niewöhner, J (corresponding author), Humboldt Univ, IRI THESys, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.; Cornejo, SM; Niewöhner, J (corresponding author), Humboldt Univ, Inst European Ethnol, D-10117 Berlin, Germany.
EM scornejopuschner@gmail.com; joerg.niewoehner@hu-berlin.de
RI Niewoehner, Joerg/JNR-7511-2023
OI Cornejo Puschner, Sascha/0000-0002-9377-6814; Niewohner,
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NR 118
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 8
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD DEC
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 24
AR 3542
DI 10.3390/w13243542
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA XY9PP
UT WOS:000737296700001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Elgendawy, A
   Davies, P
   Chang, HC
AF Elgendawy, Alaa
   Davies, Peter
   Chang, Hsing-Chung
TI Planning for cooler cities: a plan quality evaluation for Urban Heat
   Island consideration
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban Heat Island; strategic planning; plan quality evaluation; climate
   change; resilient cities
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; STRATEGIES;
   MITIGATION; FRAMEWORK; IMPACTS; GROWTH; STATES; RISKS
AB City strategic plans and enabling policies provide a framework for and inform future development across multiple scales. An exemplar city strategic plan will be one based on evidence, enabled by complementary policy outcomes, and built on the knowledge of the existing landscape. This study evaluated the plan quality of eighteen metropolitan strategic plans for city members in the 100 Resilient Cities initiative. A protocol was developed containing thirty-two indicators to assess plans capacity to act as a strategic planning tool to develop, analyse and implement strategies for the Urban Heat Island (UHI) and climate change mitigation and adaptation. The evaluation indicated that strategies addressing the UHI are rarely included in metropolitan plans. Strategic plans showed a lack of evidence-base to inform the potential actions. Urban warming is often linked to extreme weather events anticipated under climate change, not the UHI as a systemic and increasing phenomenon. We recommend that the pathway to addressing UHI mitigation and adaptation may lie in its nexus to aspects of climate change that concurrently can serve to support liveable and resilient cities.
C1 [Elgendawy, Alaa; Davies, Peter; Chang, Hsing-Chung] Macquarie Univ, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
C3 Macquarie University
RP Elgendawy, A (corresponding author), Macquarie Univ, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
EM alaa.el-gendawy@students.mq.edu.au
OI Davies, Peter/0000-0002-2711-891X; Elgendawy, Alaa/0000-0001-9303-2594;
   Chang, Hsing-Chung/0000-0003-3523-9938
FU Macquarie University internal Research Excellence Scholarship (MQRES)
FX The authors acknowledge that the work conducted in the production of
   this research article was financially supported by the Macquarie
   University internal Research Excellence Scholarship (MQRES).
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NR 78
TC 9
Z9 10
U1 6
U2 58
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PD JUL 3
PY 2020
VL 22
IS 4
BP 531
EP 553
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2020.1781605
EA JUN 2020
PG 23
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA MN6GW
UT WOS:000547649600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Paavola, J
   Primmer, E
AF Paavola, Jouni
   Primmer, Eeva
TI Governing the Provision of Insurance Value From Ecosystems
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Ecosystem services; Risk management; Flood risk; Pest risk; Governance;
   Polycentricity
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION; SERVICES;
   GOVERNANCE; MANAGEMENT; PAYMENTS; FORESTS; LANDSCAPE; POLICY;
   VULNERABILITY
AB Ecosystems can buffer against adverse events, such as storms or pest outbreaks by reducing the probability of harm and magnitude of losses. We conceptualise factors involved in the governance of insurance value provision, drawing on the notions of protection and insurance, exogeneity and endogeneity, and allocation of rights and responsibilities. Using riverine floods and forest pest outbreaks as examples, we explore the challenges of governing ecosystem-based risk management. We suggest that such governance should build on existing institutions, because insurance value is jointly produced with provisioning ecosystem services and the governance arrangements for them importantly shape insurance value provision. However, existing institutional arrangements do not acknowledge involved actors' rights and responsibilities and they do not facilitate landscape level management of risks. While PES schemes and other market-like solutions may govern the provision of insurance value when transaction costs and trade-offs between the provision of insurance value and private goods are low, regulation or public provision is needed when transaction costs and trade-offs are high. The complexity of challenges in governing the provision of insurance value highlights the need for polycentric governance involving collaboration, knowledge creation and dissemination and the funding of activities needed for them.
C1 [Paavola, Jouni] Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Ctr Climate Change Econ & Policy, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Primmer, Eeva] Finnish Environm Inst, Helsinki, Finland.
C3 University of Leeds; Finnish Environment Institute
RP Paavola, J (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Ctr Climate Change Econ & Policy, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
EM j.paavola@leeds.ac.uk; eeva.primmer@ymparisto.fi
RI Paavola, Jouni/A-5413-2010
OI Paavola, Jouni/0000-0001-5720-466X; Primmer, Eeva/0000-0001-8954-8205
FU Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) [ES/K006576/1]; Academy of
   Finland [275772]; ESRC [ES/K006576/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX We would like to thank Rosalind Bark, Julia Martin-Ortega, Mikael Hilden
   and Arild Vatn for their valuable comments on earlier versions of this
   manuscript as well as the feedback from the participants in the special
   session Governing Insurance Value of Ecosystems at the European
   Ecological Economics Conference in Budapest in 2017. JP was supported by
   funding from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) to the
   Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy (CCCEP) (ESRC grant
   number ES/K006576/1). EP was supported by funding from the Academy of
   Finland (project number 275772).
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NR 88
TC 25
Z9 26
U1 1
U2 26
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0921-8009
EI 1873-6106
J9 ECOL ECON
JI Ecol. Econ.
PD OCT
PY 2019
VL 164
AR 106346
DI 10.1016/j.ecolecon.2019.06.001
PG 9
WC Ecology; Economics; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA IP9MP
UT WOS:000480374500013
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hong, NB
   Yabe, M
AF Nguyen Bich Hong
   Yabe, Mitsuyasu
TI Improvement in irrigation water use efficiency: a strategy for climate
   change adaptation and sustainable development of Vietnamese tea
   production
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Irrigation water use efficiency; Tea production; Climate change;
   Vietnam; Stochastic frontier analysis
ID STOCHASTIC PRODUCTION FRONTIER; ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY; TECHNICAL
   EFFICIENCY; FARMERS; IMPACT; DETERMINANTS; CONSERVATION; AGRICULTURE;
   SCARCITY; CHINA
AB Irrigation is indispensable to overcome insufficient rainfall and to achieve a stabilized yield for tea production. As the severe scarcity of water resources because of climate change, water conservation through efficient irrigation has turned into a vital strategy for tea sector in solving this rising challenge. This paper analyzes irrigation water use efficiency of small-scale tea farms in Vietnam and identifies its determinants applying stochastic frontier analysis. Results showed that under decreasing returns to scale, the mean irrigation water use efficiency was 42.19 %, indicating the existence of substantial water waste. If farmers become more efficient in using water, saving 57.81 % of irrigation water is possible unaccompanied by reducing the observed output. The factors affecting tea farms' irrigation water use efficiency were investigated by Tobit model. Gender, water shortage awareness, soil and water conservation practice, off-farm income share, extension services access and well water utilization showed significant influence on the efficiency of irrigation water. The study' results provide insights to policymakers in implementing better water resource management amid climate change.
C1 [Nguyen Bich Hong; Yabe, Mitsuyasu] Kyushu Univ, Grad Sch Bioresource & Bioenvironm Sci, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, Environm Econ Lab,Higashi Ku, 6-10-1 Hakozaki, Fukuoka, Japan.
   [Nguyen Bich Hong] Thai Nguyen Univ Econ & Business & Adm, Thai Nguyen, Vietnam.
C3 Kyushu University; Thai Nguyen University
RP Hong, NB (corresponding author), Kyushu Univ, Grad Sch Bioresource & Bioenvironm Sci, Dept Agr & Resource Econ, Environm Econ Lab,Higashi Ku, 6-10-1 Hakozaki, Fukuoka, Japan.; Hong, NB (corresponding author), Thai Nguyen Univ Econ & Business & Adm, Thai Nguyen, Vietnam.
EM nguyen.bich.hong85@gmail.com
RI Bich Hong, Nguyen/AAK-1056-2020
OI Bich Hong, Nguyen/0000-0002-9980-3836
FU Monbukagakusho scholarship [26310311]; Japanese Ministry of Education,
   Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology; Setsutaro Kobayashi Memorial
   Fund; Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [26310311] Funding Source:
   KAKEN
FX This research was funded in 2014 by the Monbukagakusho scholarship
   (Study Number 26310311), the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture,
   Sports, Science, and Technology and the Setsutaro Kobayashi Memorial
   Fund. The authors are thankful to the anonymous reviewers for their
   appreciated recommendations and comments on the manuscript.
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NR 69
TC 30
Z9 34
U1 0
U2 76
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD AUG
PY 2017
VL 19
IS 4
BP 1247
EP 1263
DI 10.1007/s10668-016-9793-8
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FA7GK
UT WOS:000405613200008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tan, RR
   Aviso, KB
   Cayamanda, CD
   Chiu, ASF
   Promentilla, MAB
   Ubando, AT
   Yu, KDS
AF Tan, R. R.
   Aviso, K. B.
   Cayamanda, C. D.
   Chiu, A. S. F.
   Promentilla, M. A. B.
   Ubando, A. T.
   Yu, K. D. S.
TI A fuzzy linear programming enterprise input-output model for optimal
   crisis operations in industrial complexes
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PRODUCTION ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Industrial complex; Climate change adaptation; Energy-water nexus; Fuzzy
   linear programming; Enterprise input-output model; Risk management
ID SUPPLY CHAINS; MANAGEMENT; OPTIMIZATION; PERFORMANCE; ADJUSTMENT;
   SYSTEMS; ENERGY
AB Industrial complexes may be subject to significant risk of cascading failure caused by various disruptions and emerging economies are potentially more susceptible to the impacts as less established policies are in place to deal with these issues. In particular, there is a need to develop adaptation strategies to ensure the resilience of industrial activities to various perturbations that may result from climate change. The inherent complexity of such systems makes decision-making for risk management a non-trivial task that is best facilitated with the aid of mathematical models. Enterprise input-output models have been used extensively to model production systems at different scales. In this work, a fuzzy linear programming enterprise input-output model is developed to determine optimal adjustments in production levels of multi-product systems when a crisis is induced by a loss of resource inputs. The model allows for adjustments that are equitable for different decision-makers that may comprise an industrial complex or a supply chain. Capabilities of the model are illustrated with a case study on the effect of water shortage on an aluminum production system. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Tan, R. R.; Aviso, K. B.; Cayamanda, C. D.; Chiu, A. S. F.; Promentilla, M. A. B.; Ubando, A. T.] De La Salle Univ, Ctr Engn & Sustainable Dev Res, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
   [Tan, R. R.; Aviso, K. B.; Promentilla, M. A. B.] De La Salle Univ, Dept Chem Engn, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
   [Chiu, A. S. F.] De La Salle Univ, Dept Ind Engn, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
   [Ubando, A. T.] De La Salle Univ, Dept Mech Engn, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
   [Yu, K. D. S.] De La Salle Univ, Sch Econ, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
C3 De La Salle University; De La Salle University; De La Salle University;
   De La Salle University; De La Salle University
RP Tan, RR (corresponding author), De La Salle Univ, Ctr Engn & Sustainable Dev Res, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.; Tan, RR (corresponding author), De La Salle Univ, Dept Chem Engn, 2401 Taft Ave, Manila 0922, Philippines.
EM raymond.tan@dlsu.edu.ph
RI Promentilla, Michael/AAH-5265-2020; Ubando, Aristotle/AAV-5353-2021;
   Chiu, Shun/ABA-4570-2020; Aviso, Kathleen/ABA-4589-2020; Yu,
   Krista/AAG-6259-2020
OI Promentilla, Michael Angelo/0000-0002-9009-8552; Yu, Krista
   Danielle/0000-0002-3001-1793; Chiu, Anthony Shun
   Fung/0000-0003-2411-7302; Cayamanda, Christina/0000-0002-5468-5557;
   Aviso, Kathleen/0000-0002-9994-5172
FU Philippine Commission on Higher Education (CHED) via the Philippine
   Higher Education Research Network (PHERNet) Sustain ability Studies
   Program
FX The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the Philippine
   Commission on Higher Education (CHED) via the Philippine Higher
   Education Research Network (PHERNet) Sustain ability Studies Program.
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NR 57
TC 27
Z9 29
U1 4
U2 49
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0925-5273
EI 1873-7579
J9 INT J PROD ECON
JI Int. J. Prod. Econ.
PD NOV
PY 2016
VL 181
SI SI
BP 410
EP 418
DI 10.1016/j.ijpe.2015.10.012
PN B
PG 9
WC Engineering, Industrial; Engineering, Manufacturing; Operations Research
   & Management Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Engineering; Operations Research & Management Science
GA ED7ZL
UT WOS:000389091200015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Sandholz, S
AF Sandholz, Simone
BE Renaud, FG
   SudmeierRieux, K
   Estrella, M
   Nehren, U
TI Potential for Ecosystem-Based Disaster Risk Reduction and Climate Change
   Adaptation in the Urban Landscape of Kathmandu Valley, Nepal
SO ECOSYSTEM-BASED DISASTER RISK REDUCTION AND ADAPTATION IN PRACTICE
SE Advances in Natural and Technological Hazards Research
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Kathmandu; Urban risk; Ecosystem services; Livelihoods; Cultural values;
   Disaster risk reduction
ID PAKISTAN EARTHQUAKE; ECOLOGY
AB This chapter elaborates on the potential for applying ecosystem-based solutions for urban disaster risk reduction in developing countries, based on the case study of the Kathmandu Valley in Nepal. The high level of mainly informal urbanization in the Kathmandu Valley has led to severe environmental problems and loss of ecosystem services. As a consequence, the livelihoods of the 2.5 million inhabitants in the almost entirely built-up Kathmandu Valley are increasingly at risk, as seen in the aftermath of the 2015 earthquakes that caused widespread damage in the urban area. Combined risks from natural hazards and unsuitable urban planning are likely to be exacerbated by climate change. Due to political instability during the past decades, the poor execution of existing plans and policies as well as the enactment of new ones remain challenging, without real signs for improvement. In addition, the complex governance system involving local, national and international actors is another challenge being faced in this urban agglomeration. Understanding of human-nature interactions, including values attached to natural assets by local communities, is crucial for the development of successful long-term strategies for risk reduction that integrate ecosystem-based solutions.
C1 [Sandholz, Simone] Univ Innsbruck, Inst Geog, Working Grp Dev Studies, Innsbruck, Austria.
   [Sandholz, Simone] Univ Innsbruck, Inst Geog, Working Grp Sustainabil Sci, Innsbruck, Austria.
   [Sandholz, Simone] Univ Innsbruck, Inst Geog, Nat Hazards Res, Innsbruck, Austria.
C3 University of Innsbruck; University of Innsbruck; University of
   Innsbruck
RP Sandholz, S (corresponding author), Univ Innsbruck, Inst Geog, Working Grp Dev Studies, Innsbruck, Austria.; Sandholz, S (corresponding author), Univ Innsbruck, Inst Geog, Working Grp Sustainabil Sci, Innsbruck, Austria.; Sandholz, S (corresponding author), Univ Innsbruck, Inst Geog, Nat Hazards Res, Innsbruck, Austria.
EM simone.sandholz@th-koeln.de
RI Sandholz, Simone/AFL-4819-2022
OI Sandholz, Simone/0000-0002-2894-1633
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   [No title captured]
NR 92
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 12
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1878-9897
EI 2213-6959
BN 978-3-319-43633-3; 978-3-319-43631-9
J9 ADV NAT TECH HAZ RES
PY 2016
VL 42
BP 335
EP 360
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-43633-3_15
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-43633-3
PG 26
WC Engineering, Environmental; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Engineering; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA BH2YR
UT WOS:000399487500016
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Noh, SJ
   Chung, ES
   Seo, Y
AF Noh, Seong Jin
   Chung, Eun-Sung
   Seo, Yongwon
TI Performance of a Rain Barrel Sharing Network under Climate Change
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE rain barrel-sharing network; reliability; vulnerability; resiliency;
   rainwater harvesting system; climate change
ID RAINWATER HARVESTING SYSTEMS; GREATER SYDNEY; WATER SAVINGS; URBAN
   WATER; RELIABILITY; CAPACITY; TANKS
AB Rain barrels can be technically shared through social practices or mutual agreement between individual households. This study proposes the evaluation system for a rain barrel sharing network (RBSN) considering three performance criteria of reliability, resiliency, and vulnerability, under plausible climate change scenarios. First, this study shows how the system can be improved in terms of the performance criteria using historical daily rainfall data based on the storage-reliability-yield relationship. This study then examined how the benefits from RBSN are affected by climate change after 100 years. Three climate change scenarios (A1B, A2 and B2) and three global circulation models were used for this purpose. The results showed that the reliability and vulnerability are improved due to sharing and their improvements become larger under climate change conditions. In contrast, the resiliency reduces slightly due to sharing and its reduction is attenuated under climate change conditions. In particular, vulnerability will be reduced significantly under climate change. These results suggest that the sharing of various water resources systems can be an effective climate change adaptation strategy that reduces vulnerability and increases the reliability of the system.
C1 [Noh, Seong Jin] Korea Inst Civil Engn & Bldg Technol, Goyang 411712, South Korea.
   [Chung, Eun-Sung] Seoul Natl Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Civil Engn, Seoul 139798, South Korea.
   [Seo, Yongwon] Yeungnam Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Gyongsan 712749, South Korea.
C3 Korea Institute of Civil Engineering & Building Technology (KICT); Seoul
   National University of Science & Technology; Yeungnam University
RP Seo, Y (corresponding author), Yeungnam Univ, Dept Civil Engn, 280 Daehak Ro, Gyongsan 712749, South Korea.
EM sjnoh@kict.re.kr; eschung@seoultech.ac.kr; yseo@ynu.ac.kr
RI Noh, Seong Jin/I-3607-2019; Chung, Eun-Sung/U-9010-2019
OI Seo, Yongwon/0000-0001-5689-2165; Chung, Eun-Sung/0000-0002-4329-1800
FU Basic Science Research Program of the National Research Foundation of
   Korea (NRF) from the Ministry of Science, Information and Communication
   Technology (ICT) and Future Planning [NRF-2013R1A1A1058964]; Strategic
   Research Project - Korea Institute of Civil Engineering and Building
   Technology
FX This study was supported by the Basic Science Research Program of the
   National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) from the Ministry of
   Science, Information and Communication Technology (ICT) and Future
   Planning (NRF-2013R1A1A1058964) and also supported by a grant from a
   Strategic Research Project funded by the Korea Institute of Civil
   Engineering and Building Technology.
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NR 39
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 26
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JUL
PY 2015
VL 7
IS 7
BP 3466
EP 3485
DI 10.3390/w7073466
PG 20
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA CP5CL
UT WOS:000359898800014
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Symons, K
AF Symons, Kate
TI Anti-politics, Apocalypse and Adaptation in Kenya's National Climate
   Change Response Strategy
SO SCOTTISH GEOGRAPHICAL JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; Kenya; Africa; climate chance; anti-politics
ID SECURITY
AB Climate change is increasingly discussed in apocalyptic terms, a spectre-invoking crisis discourse that simultaneously legitimises society-wide action, while de-politicising this very political issue. This paper examines the depoliticisation of climate change adaptation in Kenya, a country which has been recently praised as a developing country with a progressive adaptation policy. Using examples from fieldwork in Kenya, it focusses on Kenya's recently adopted National Climate Change Response Strategy (NCCRS), and argues that Kenya's adaptation discourse is driven by particular imaginaries, specifically: adaptation as a 'universal apocalypse', and adaptation as a technical-economic problem. These function as deliberate anti-political strategies, aimed at obscuring the highly charged realities of adaptation. For Kenya's current political elite adaptation is predominantly a matter of reducing the perceived risks to economic growth, and enhancing opportunities to gain revenue from international funding sources. This is achieved through a discursive construction of a particular vision of adaptation, and against a backdrop of a capitalist strategy for growth. The paper concludes that a critical and political interpretation of the NCCRS and similar adaptation strategies is necessary to keep equity and justice at the centre of the climate debate, and to dispel the myth of adaptation policy making as a rational and disinterested process.
C1 Univ Edinburgh, Inst Geog, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, Midlothian, Scotland.
C3 University of Edinburgh
RP Symons, K (corresponding author), Univ Edinburgh, Inst Geog, Drummond St, Edinburgh EH8 9XP, Midlothian, Scotland.
EM k.symons@sms.ed.ac.uk
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NR 38
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 14
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1470-2541
EI 1751-665X
J9 SCOT GEOGR J
JI Scott. Geogr. J.
PY 2014
VL 130
IS 4
BP 266
EP 278
DI 10.1080/14702541.2014.907442
PG 13
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA AP8DQ
UT WOS:000342309100004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sovacool, BK
   D'Agostino, AL
   Rawlani, A
   Meenawat, H
AF Sovacool, Benjamin K.
   D'Agostino, Anthony Louis
   Rawlani, Amireeta
   Meenawat, Harsha
TI Improving climate change adaptation in least developed Asia
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Adaptive capacity; Resilience; Least developed countries;
   Asia
ID RESILIENCE
AB This article investigates the climate vulnerabilities of four least developed Asian countries Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, and the Maldives-before discussing how efforts are underway to strengthen infrastructural, organizational, and community-based adaptation. Infrastructural adaptation refers to the assets, technologies, or "hardware" that can withstand climate change impacts, such as climate-proofed irrigation systems, roads, or electricity networks. Organizational adaptation refers to the endurance of an effective institution or set of institutions, usually government ministries or departments, in charge of planning and policy, as well as its capacity to develop and revise climate policies. Social adaptation refers to the cohesion of communities and the livelihoods of the people that compose them. We argue that resilient adaptation infrastructures can recover quickly from climate disruptions, resilient organizations can cope with new stresses and changes and still function, resilient communities have assets such as education or wealth that enable them to survive or even thrive in the face of climate-related challenges. Ongoing adaptation efforts in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, and the Maldives are examples of projects that simultaneously attempt to enhance all three dimensions of adaptation. Data for these cases comes primarily from a review of country National Adaptation Programs of Action (NAPAs) supplemented with research interviews and site visits. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Sovacool, Benjamin K.] Vermont Law Sch, Inst Energy & Environm, Energy Secur & Justice Program, S Royalton, VT 05068 USA.
   [D'Agostino, Anthony Louis; Meenawat, Harsha] Natl Univ Singapore, Lee Kuan Yew Sch Publ Policy, Singapore 117548, Singapore.
   [Rawlani, Amireeta] Natl Univ Singapore, Sch Design & Environm, Singapore 117548, Singapore.
   [D'Agostino, Anthony Louis] Columbia Univ, Sch Int & Publ Affairs, New York, NY 10027 USA.
C3 Vermont Law & Graduate School; National University of Singapore;
   National University of Singapore; Columbia University
RP Sovacool, BK (corresponding author), Vermont Law Sch, Inst Energy & Environm, Energy Secur & Justice Program, POB 96,164 Chelsea St, S Royalton, VT 05068 USA.
EM Bsovacool@vermontlaw.edu
RI Sovacool, Benjamin/Y-2392-2019
OI Sovacool, Benjamin/0000-0002-4794-9403; D'Agostino,
   Anthony/0000-0002-1895-9995
FU Centre on Asia and Globalisation; Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy;
   Singaporean Ministry of Education for an Academic Research Fund
FX The authors are appreciative to the Centre on Asia and Globalisation and
   the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy for some of the financial
   assistance needed to conduct the research interviews, field research,
   and travel for this project. The authors are also extremely grateful to
   the Singaporean Ministry of Education for an Academic Research Fund
   Grant which has supported elements of the work reported here. Any
   opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this
   material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the
   views of the Centre on Asia and Globalisation, Lee Kuan Yew School of
   Public Policy, or Singaporean Ministry of Education.
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NR 44
TC 29
Z9 33
U1 2
U2 74
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1462-9011
EI 1873-6416
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLICY
JI Environ. Sci. Policy
PD AUG
PY 2012
VL 21
BP 112
EP 125
DI 10.1016/j.envsci.2012.04.009
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 977CK
UT WOS:000306633800011
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shepherd, P
   Tansey, J
   Dowlatabadi, H
AF Shepherd, Philippa
   Tansey, James
   Dowlatabadi, Hadi
TI Context matters: What shapes adaptation to water stress in the Okanagan?
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article; Proceedings Paper
CT Conference on Adaptive Research and Governance in Climate Change
CY OCT, 2003
CL Ohio State Univ, Columbus, OH
SP Climate Change & Environm Res Initiat, Environm Policy Initiat, Mershon Ctr, Cluster Interdisciplinary Res Int Themes
HO Ohio State Univ
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; VARIABILITY
AB This paper describes two case studies of demand-side water management in the Okanagan region of southern British Columbia, Canada. The case studies reveal important lessons about how local context shapes the process of adaptation; in these cases, adaptation to rising and changing water demand under a regime of increasingly limited supply in a semi-arid region. Both case studies represent examples of water meter implementation, specifically volume-based pricing in a residential area and as a compliance tool in a mainly farming district. While the initiative was successful in the residential setting, agricultural metering met with stiff resistance. These cases suggest many factors shape the character of the adaptation process, including: interpretation of the signal relative to context, newness of the approach, consumer values, and local and provincial political agendas. Although context has been explored in resource management circles, thus far climate change adaptation research has not adequately discussed the embeddedness of adaptation. In other words, how context matters and what aspects of context, unrelated to climate change, could encourage or thwart the act of adapting. This study is a simple illustration of the potential drivers, barriers and enabling factors that have influenced the adaptation process of water management decisions in the Okanagan.
C1 Univ British Columbia, Sustainable Dev Res Initat, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada.
   Univ Oxford, Said Bus Sch, James Martin Inst Sci & Civilizat, Oxford OX1 1HP, England.
C3 University of British Columbia; University of Oxford
RP Shepherd, P (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia, Sustainable Dev Res Initat, 1924 West Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z2, Canada.
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NR 33
TC 23
Z9 31
U1 0
U2 9
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD SEP
PY 2006
VL 78
IS 1
BP 31
EP 62
DI 10.1007/s10584-006-9093-7
PG 32
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 083UY
UT WOS:000240484900003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Moritz, L
   Kuhn, L
   Bobojonov, I
   Glauben, T
AF Moritz, Laura
   Kuhn, Lena
   Bobojonov, Ihtiyor
   Glauben, Thomas
TI Assessing Peer Influence on Farmers' Climate Adaptations: An
   Experimental Adoption of Index Insurance and Savings in Uzbekistan
SO JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND APPLIED ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Adoption behavior; climate adaptations; index insurance;
   lab-in-the-field experiment; peer imitation; savings; Uzbekistan; G22;
   O16; O12; O13; D91
ID SOCIAL NETWORKS; AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGIES; CHOICE EXPERIMENT;
   DISCRETE-CHOICE; DEMAND; RISK; UNCERTAINTY; DYNAMICS; ETHIOPIA; IMPACT
AB Strengthening climate resilience requires farmers to select climate adaptation strategies like weather index insurance. Acknowledging that decision-making is not isolated, this study explores simultaneous peer imitation in climate adaptation choices consisting of index insurance, savings, and their interaction. We present results from a lab-in-the-field experiment that introduces innovative index insurance. Findings indicate significant and strong imitation attitudes. While the bigger peer surrounding seems relevant in the static perspective, the closer surrounding gains importance in the dynamic perspective. Additionally, credit, trust, and practical understanding stimulate adoption. Community-based extension interventions and credit-bundled products may increase index insurance diffusion and improve climate resilience.
C1 [Moritz, Laura; Kuhn, Lena; Bobojonov, Ihtiyor; Glauben, Thomas] Leibniz Inst Agr Dev Transit Econ IAMO, Agr Markets Dept, Halle, Saale, Germany.
C3 Leibniz Association; Leibniz Institut fur Agrarentwicklung in
   Transformationsokonomien (IAMO)
RP Moritz, L (corresponding author), Leibniz Inst Agr Dev Transit Econ IAMO, Agr Markets Dept, Halle, Saale, Germany.
EM Moritz@iamo.de
RI Moritz, Laura/JPK-5267-2023
OI Moritz, Laura/0000-0002-0049-6507
FU GROSS Insurance company in Uzbekistan
FX We are very grateful to the GROSS Insurance company in Uzbekistan,
   Hannover Re and Sarvarbek Eltazarov (Leibniz Institute of Agricultural
   Development in Transition Economies) for calculating the marketable
   index insurance product used in our analysis. We also thank our partner
   Nuriddin Muradullaev (Tashkent State Economic University) for his field
   assistance during data collection. This work was part of the KlimALEZ
   project that was developing and implementing real index insurance
   options in Central Asia.
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NR 68
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 5
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA EDINBURGH BLDG, SHAFTESBURY RD, CB2 8RU CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
SN 1074-0708
EI 2056-7405
J9 J AGRIC APPL ECON
JI J. Agric. Appl. Econ.
PD FEB
PY 2024
VL 56
IS 1
BP 1
EP 20
DI 10.1017/aae.2023.38
EA DEC 2023
PG 20
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Economics
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics
GA E1A8S
UT WOS:001125076000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Enu, KB
   Ahenkan, A
   Ackom, E
AF Enu, Kirk B.
   Ahenkan, Albert
   Ackom, Emmanuel
TI Prioritizing climate adaptation at the local level in Ghana
SO AIMS GEOSCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; planning; local governance; climate impacts;
   institutions; bottom-up; climate policy; political actors
ID NETWORKS; INSTITUTIONS; POLITICS; BARRIERS; POLICIES
AB The increasing intensity and frequency of climate impacts exacerbate pressures on front-line local communities. This calls for location-specific adaptation strategies. Alignment of strategies with respective National Climate Change Strategy is key for the overall sustainability of initiatives and local communities. The work presented in this paper examines the adoption and prioritization of climate adaptation policies at the local level based on a case study of the Adansi North District (AND) in Ghana. An assessment of the extent to which climate adaptation policies are captured and budgeted for was done via a review of the district's medium-term development and key political actors were interviewed to assess the level of priority they place on climate adaptation. Findings from the study reveal that 41% of the locally adopted policies directly align with stipulated national level. We attribute the adoption of climate policies in AND to local political actors having higher education which has afforded them good understanding of the climate change phenomenon, being experienced professionals and having to work within institutional rubrics that make climate policy formulation a requirement. However, little priority is given to these policies for implementation, mainly through the non-allocation of funds. We account for this with the weak environmental advocacy in the district and exchange between actors on adaptation. Furthermore, partisan actors who already wield veto powers and can promote policies that may not necessarily support adaptation measures, often do so, since their interest is to become popular among electorates who also prefer infrastructure over environmental policies. We conclude that although climate adaptation policies are fairly adopted and budgeted for in AND, they have not received commensurate priority for implementation. Recommendations are proposed for addressing this.
C1 [Enu, Kirk B.; Ahenkan, Albert] Univ Ghana, Coll Basic & Appl Sci, Ctr Climate Change & Sustainabil Studies, POB 222, Accra, Ghana.
   [Ackom, Emmanuel] Univ British Columbia, Fac Forestry, Forest Resources Management Dept, Energy Resources Dev & Environm ERDE Lab, Vancouver, BC VT61Z4, Canada.
C3 University of Ghana; University of British Columbia
RP Enu, KB (corresponding author), Univ Ghana, Coll Basic & Appl Sci, Ctr Climate Change & Sustainabil Studies, POB 222, Accra, Ghana.
EM benu@st.ug.edu.gh
RI Enu, Kirk/IRZ-1178-2023; Ackom, Emmanuel/R-1118-2016
OI Enu, Kirk B./0000-0003-3737-5781
CR Adansi North District Assembly, 2021, DISTR MED TERM DEV P
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NR 49
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU AMER INST MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES-AIMS
PI SPRINGFIELD
PA PO BOX 2604, SPRINGFIELD, MO 65801-2604, UNITED STATES
SN 2471-2132
J9 AIMS GEOSCI
JI AIMS Geosci.
PY 2023
VL 9
IS 3
BP 609
EP 631
DI 10.3934/geosci.2023033
PG 23
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Geology
GA S3FB0
UT WOS:001070049400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maréchal, L
   Dumoncel, J
   Santos, F
   Encina, WA
   Evteev, A
   Prevost, A
   Toro-Ibacache, V
   Venter, RG
   Heuzé, Y
AF Marechal, Laura
   Dumoncel, Jean
   Santos, Frederic
   Astudillo Encina, Williams
   Evteev, Andrej
   Prevost, Alice
   Toro-Ibacache, Viviana
   Venter, Rudolph G.
   Heuze, Yann
TI New insights into the variability of upper airway morphology in modern
   humans
SO JOURNAL OF ANATOMY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; deformation-based models; evolution; modern humans;
   nasal airway
ID SEXUAL-DIMORPHISM; ECOGEOGRAPHIC VARIATION; CLIMATIC ADAPTATION; FACIAL
   EVOLUTION; MAXILLARY SINUS; GENUS HOMO; NASAL; NOSE; TEMPERATURE; SHAPE
AB The biological adaptation of the human lineage to its environment is a recurring question in paleoanthropology. Particularly, how eco-geographic factors (e.g., environmental temperature and humidity) have shaped upper airway morphology in hominins have been subject to continuing debate. Nasal shape is the result of many intertwined factors that include, but are not limited to, genetic drift, sexual selection, or adaptation to climate. A quantification of nasal airway (NA) morphological variation in modern human populations is crucial to better understand these multiple factors. In the present research, we study 195 in vivo CT scans of adult individuals collected in five different geographic areas (Chile, France, Cambodia, Russia, and South Africa). After segmentation of the nasal airway, we reconstruct 3D meshes that are analyzed with a landmark-free geometric morphometrics method based on surface deformation. Our results highlight subtle but statistically significant morphological differences between our five samples. The two morphologically closest groups are France and Russia, whose NAs are longer and narrower, with an important protrusion of the supero-anterior part. The Cambodian sample is the most morphologically distinct and clustered sample, with a mean NA that is wider and shorter. On the contrary, the Chilean sample form the most scattered cluster with the greatest intra-population variation. The South African sample is morphologically close to the Cambodian sample, but also partially overlaps the French and Russian variation. Interestingly, we record no correlation between NA volume and geographic groups, which raises the question of climate-related metabolic demands for oxygen consumption. The other factors of variation (sex and age) have no influence on the NA shape in our samples. However, NA volume varies significantly according both to sex and age: it is higher in males than in females and tends to increase with age. In contrast, we observe no effect of temperature or humidity on NA volume. Finally, we highlight the important influence of asymmetries related to nasal septum deviations in NA shape variation.
C1 [Marechal, Laura; Dumoncel, Jean; Santos, Frederic; Heuze, Yann] Univ Bordeaux, PACEA, Minist Culture, CNRS, Pessac, France.
   [Astudillo Encina, Williams] Univ Chile, Ctr Imagenol Hosp Clin, Santiago, Chile.
   [Evteev, Andrej] Lomonosov Moscow State Univ, Anuchin Res Inst & Museum Anthropol, Moscow, Russia.
   [Prevost, Alice] Univ Hosp Ctr Toulouse, Plast & Maxillofacial Surg Dept, Toulouse, France.
   [Toro-Ibacache, Viviana] Univ Chile, Ctr Anal Cuantitat Antropol Dent, Santiago, Chile.
   [Venter, Rudolph G.] Stellenbosch Univ, Tygerberg Hosp, Dept Surg Sci, Div Orthopaed Surg, Cape Town, South Africa.
C3 Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Universite de
   Bordeaux; Universidad de Chile; Lomonosov Moscow State University; CHU
   de Toulouse; Universidad de Chile; Tygerberg Hospital; Stellenbosch
   University
RP Maréchal, L (corresponding author), Univ Bordeaux, PACEA, Minist Culture, CNRS, Pessac, France.
EM laura.marechal@u-bordeaux.fr
RI Santos, Frédéric/I-3565-2019; Toro-Ibacache, Viviana/ACZ-7458-2022;
   HEUZE, Yann/A-9371-2011; Evteev, Andrej/H-6538-2014; Alice,
   Prevost/AIA-0018-2022
OI Dumoncel, Jean/0000-0003-0789-7458; Santos,
   Frederic/0000-0003-1445-3871; Heuze, Yann/0000-0002-0660-9613;
   Toro-Ibacache, Viviana/0000-0003-2265-8180; Marechal,
   Laura/0000-0001-7728-5196; Prevost, Alice/0000-0003-2903-0644; Venter,
   Rudolph Grobler/0000-0003-0022-6969
FU Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique; Education, Audiovisual and
   Culture Executive Agency [18- 56- 15001]; Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo
   Cientifico y Tecnologico [EAC-A05- 2017]; Russian Foundation for Basic
   Research [11150175]; University of Bordeaux
FX Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Grant/Award Number: 18-
   56- 15001; Education, Audiovisual and Culture Executive Agency,
   Grant/Award Number: EAC-A05- 2017; Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo
   Cientifico y Tecnologico, Grant/Award Number: 11150175; Russian
   Foundation for Basic Research; University of Bordeaux
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NR 103
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 4
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0021-8782
EI 1469-7580
J9 J ANAT
JI J. Anat.
PD MAY
PY 2023
VL 242
IS 5
BP 781
EP 795
DI 10.1111/joa.13813
EA DEC 2022
PG 15
WC Anatomy & Morphology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Anatomy & Morphology
GA D5SS5
UT WOS:000905829800001
PM 36585765
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Van Neste, SL
   Madenian, H
   Houde-Tremblay, E
   Cloutier, G
AF Van Neste, Sophie L.
   Madenian, Helene
   Houde-Tremblay, Emilie
   Cloutier, Genevieve
TI Resilient climate urbanism and the politics of experimentation for
   adaptation
SO URBAN GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE climate urbanism; climate adaptation; governance experiments; urban
   living lab; infrastructure; climate equity
ID GOVERNANCE; CITIES; POLICY; INFRASTRUCTURES; SUSTAINABILITY; STRUGGLES;
   AUTHORITY; CITY
AB Cities are increasingly pursuing actions to become more resilient in the face of climate change and to seize related economic growth opportunities. Recent contributions have argued that "climate urbanism" is emerging as a hegemonic trend that is structuring climate adaptation with a focus on the selective securing of vital infrastructure for growth, promoting an apolitical vision of resilience and exacerbating inequalities. Developing situated understandings of these dynamics and their contestation seems key. We analyse this trend of climate urbanism in a specific setting of climate adaptation experiment: living labs. We investigate and intervene on two key processes of the politics of climate experimentation - making for compelling urban projects and focusing on infrastructure reconfiguration - whereby living labs could challenge or, conversely, amplify negative trends of climate urbanism. Our research in Montreal shows the value of understanding the subjectivities of the practitioners involved and the fields of political struggles where adaptation lands. Although the negative trends of climate urbanism appear very resilient and living labs have important limitations, we believe they can be used to muddle through pathways for more debates, equity and justice in climate adaptation.
C1 [Van Neste, Sophie L.; Madenian, Helene] Inst Natl Rech Sci, Ctr Urbanisat Culture Soc, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Houde-Tremblay, Emilie; Cloutier, Genevieve] Univ Laval, Ecole Super Amenagement Terr & Dev Reg, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
C3 University of Quebec; Institut national de la recherche scientifique
   (INRS); Laval University
RP Van Neste, SL (corresponding author), Inst Natl Rech Sci, Ctr Urbanisat Culture Soc, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
EM sophiel.vanneste@inrs.ca
RI Cloutier, Geneviève/AIE-4942-2022; Van Neste, Sophie L./LTY-8356-2024
OI Cloutier, Genevieve/0000-0001-9697-3648; Van Neste, Sophie
   L./0000-0003-3319-4879
FU Ouranos (via the Quebec governement's Climate Change Action Plan)
   [950-232808]; City of Montreal, Mitacs Acceleration, SSHRC; Canada
   Research Chair in Urban Climate Action [950-232808];  [CER-19-510]
FX We warmly thank all participants to the living lab for their time and
   commitment, as well as students, professors, partners and friends in the
   Labo Climat Montreal. We also wish to thank the anonymous referrees for
   their insightful comments. This research has been reviewed and approved
   by the INRS Ethics in research committee (CER-19-510).
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NR 59
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 3
U2 7
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0272-3638
EI 1938-2847
J9 URBAN GEOGR
JI Urban Geogr.
PD 2024 APR 16
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/02723638.2024.2336852
EA APR 2024
PG 21
WC Geography; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Urban Studies
GA OS0Y2
UT WOS:001209158800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shou, T
   Xu, H
AF Shou, Tao
   Xu, Han
TI Climate adaptation in traditional dwelling typologies: the case of
   Southern Anhui, China
SO ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEERING AND DESIGN MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; typology; traditional dwellings; Southern Anhui;
   thermal comfort; architectural form
ID VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE; NATURAL VENTILATION; THERMAL ADAPTATION;
   COMPOSITE CLIMATE; QUANTIFICATION; BUILDINGS
AB This study focused on the climate adaptation of traditional dwellings in Southern Anhui to identify the architectural features that influence thermal comfort conditions and uncover the mechanisms behind climate adaptation from a typological perspective. To elucidate the relationship between architectural forms and bioclimatic strategies, this study categorizes climatically responsive solutions in traditional dwellings into three levels: built shape type, space gradients, and interface adaptation. This research was conducted through a field study in Southern Anhui, and the data were analyzed qualitatively and quantitatively and a simulation of the environmental performance was conducted. The research findings demonstrate that the architectural forms and construction logic prevalent in traditional dwellings in Southern Anhui are well suited to the local climate. There was an explicit mathematical and morphological correspondence between the three types of architectural forms and climatic comfort. Overall, the results of this study can contribute significantly to contemporary residential architecture in Southern Anhui by shedding light on the inherent value of bioclimatic strategies in traditional dwellings, thereby facilitating the critical transmission to modern architectural practices in the region.
C1 [Shou, Tao; Xu, Han] Southeast Univ, Sch Architecture, 2 Sipailou, Nanjing, Peoples R China.
C3 Southeast University - China
RP Xu, H (corresponding author), Southeast Univ, Sch Architecture, 2 Sipailou, Nanjing, Peoples R China.
EM seanxuhan@seu.edu.cn
RI 冰, 莫/HKE-6728-2023
OI Shou, Tao/0000-0003-2006-9884; XU, Han/0000-0002-8150-0378
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [52278011]; Nanjing Olympic
   Sports Technological Cooperation Foundation of Jiangsu [H202320474]
FX This work was supported by the [National Natural Science Foundation of
   China #1] under grant [No. 52278011]: Research on the Tectonic System of
   Jiangnan Vernacular Architecture based on the Regulation of the Water
   Environment and by the [Nanjing Olympic Sports Technological Cooperation
   Foundation of Jiangsu #2] Grant [No. H202320474]: Research on
   High-Performance Composite-Surface Design of Urban Communities Based on
   Carbon -Efficiency Collaborative Optimization.
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NR 26
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 12
U2 30
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1745-2007
EI 1752-7589
J9 ARCHIT ENG DES MANAG
JI Archit. Eng. Des. Manag.
PD SEP 2
PY 2024
VL 20
IS 5
SI SI
BP 1301
EP 1322
DI 10.1080/17452007.2023.2295362
EA DEC 2023
PG 22
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA L2W3Z
UT WOS:001133554800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Chase, VM
AF Chase, V. Miranda
BE Filho, WL
   DeFreitas, LE
TI Analyzing the Impacts of Climate Adaptation Plans in the Amazon Basin:
   Resilience and Vulnerability for Whom?
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION IN LATIN AMERICA: MANAGING VULNERABILITY,
   FOSTERING RESILIENCE
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Symposium on Climate Change Adaptation in Latin America
CY NOV 10-12, 2016
CL Rio de Janeiro, BRAZIL
ID SOCIAL IMPACTS; GOVERNANCE; BIODIVERSITY
C1 [Chase, V. Miranda] Univ Massachusetts, Global Governance & Human Secur PhD Program, McCormack Grad Sch Policy & Global Studies, Boston, MA 02125 USA.
C3 University of Massachusetts System; University of Massachusetts Boston
RP Chase, VM (corresponding author), Univ Massachusetts, Global Governance & Human Secur PhD Program, McCormack Grad Sch Policy & Global Studies, Boston, MA 02125 USA.
EM Miranda.chase001@umb.edu
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NR 36
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 2
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-319-56946-8; 978-3-319-56945-1
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2018
BP 223
EP 239
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-56946-8_14
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BM3PW
UT WOS:000462528100014
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kabir, KH
   Schneider, UA
   Leggette, HR
AF Kabir, Khondokar H.
   Schneider, Uwe A.
   Leggette, Holli R.
TI Three faces of climate change: Using Q-methodology to understand
   farmers' perspectives of climate change and adaptive capacity in
   Bangladesh's wetland areas
SO CLIMATE SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; CHANGE BELIEFS; SUSTAINABILITY PERSPECTIVES;
   STAKEHOLDER PERSPECTIVES; PERCEPTIONS; AGRICULTURE; MANAGEMENT;
   TEMPERATURE; FLOODPLAINS; RESILIENCE
AB Even though the weather-dependent agricultural sector is severely impacted by climate change and requires more adaptive measures, climate change adaptation in the global south is slow. The perception of farmers, who are the final decision-makers, strongly influences the adoption of climate-smart technologies and the (un)willingness to follow recommended measures. Although perception studies have attracted the international community's interest, these studies have disregarded the heterogeneity within the farming community. Our study uses Q-methodology to address this gap by examining small-scale farmers' perspectives on climate change and their perceived adaptation capacity in wetland areas of north-eastern Bangladesh. Following post-sort interviews, 36 farmers were invited to participate in the Q-sorting using 34 pre-selected statements. The study revealed three distinct types of perspectives on climate change and adaptive capacity: theists who believe in the act of God and take a "do nothing" approach, realists who believe in climate change but are unaware of climate change trade-offs, and pragmatists who recognize climate change and actively pursue adaptations. The awareness of different climate change perspectives can support policymakers and extension service providers. By replacing their one-size-fits-all approach, they can better assist wetland farmers in developing and implementing tailored adaptation strategies.
C1 [Kabir, Khondokar H.; Schneider, Uwe A.] Univ Hamburg, Res Unit Sustainabil & Climate Risks, Grindelberg 5, D-20144 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Kabir, Khondokar H.] Univ Guelph, Sch Environm Design & Rural Dev, Guelph, ON, Canada.
   [Kabir, Khondokar H.] Bangladesh Agr Univ, Dept Agr Extens Educ, Mymensingh 2202, Bangladesh.
   [Leggette, Holli R.] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Agr Leadership Educ & Commun, College Stn, TX USA.
C3 University of Hamburg; University of Guelph; Bangladesh Agricultural
   University (BAU); Texas A&M University System; Texas A&M University
   College Station
RP Kabir, KH (corresponding author), Univ Hamburg, Res Unit Sustainabil & Climate Risks, Grindelberg 5, D-20144 Hamburg, Germany.
EM kabirag09@bau.edu.bd; uwe.schneider@uni-hamburg.de;
   hollileggette@tamu.edu
RI ; Schneider, Uwe/M-7342-2016; Kabir, Khondokar Humayun/W-9026-2018
OI Leggette, Holli/0000-0003-1339-1947; Schneider, Uwe/0000-0002-6833-9292;
   Kabir, Khondokar Humayun/0000-0001-9219-2529
FU Alexander von Humboldt Foundation; Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG,
   German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy - EXC
   2037
FX We appreciate the interviewees' time and cooperation, as well as the
   anonymous reviewer's insightful remarks and observations. The first
   author gratefully acknowledges financial support through an
   International Climate Protection Fellowship by the Alexander von
   Humboldt Foundation. This study also contributes to the cluster of
   excellence CLICCS (Climate, Climatic Change, and Society) of Universitat
   Hamburg funded by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German
   Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy - EXC 2037. I
   would also like to acknowledge Mr. Saifur Rahman for his kind support
   during the fieldwork for this study.
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NR 90
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 11
U2 11
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2405-8807
J9 CLIM SERV
JI Clim. Serv.
PD APR
PY 2024
VL 34
AR 100497
DI 10.1016/j.cliser.2024.100497
EA JUN 2024
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA XX5Q0
UT WOS:001264992600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barreiro, J
   Ferreira, F
   Brito, RS
   Matos, JS
AF Barreiro, Joao
   Ferreira, Filipa
   Brito, Rita Salgado
   Matos, Jose Saldanha
TI Development of Resilience Framework and Respective Tool for Urban
   Stormwater Services
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; disaster risk; integrated management; stormwater; urban
   floods; urban resilience; resilience framework; sustainable development
ID FLOOD RESILIENCE; MODEL; MANAGEMENT; SUSTAINABILITY; INDEX; CITY
AB Resilience theory has gained significant traction in various urban fields, including natural disasters and risk management or climate change adaptation, and at different organizational levels, including academics, practitioners, and policymakers. It should be considered a complementary approach to sustainable development that enhances cities' capacity to endure future uncertainties and promote rational urban development. However, the lack of a generally accepted definition of resilience hampers understanding and practical implementation in urban services like stormwater management. Conventionally, stormwater services aimed to minimize the impact of rainfall through fail-safe approaches. The resilience approach, on the other hand, embraces a holistic "safe-to-fail" perspective. The existing literature offers diverse approaches to measure flood and stormwater resilience. Still, there is room for the development and improvement of standardized but flexible frameworks for operationalizing resilience in urban drainage and flood management. To address this, a comprehensive resilience framework for urban stormwater services is proposed, entitled RESILISTORM. This framework incorporates a Strategic Dimension and a Performance Dimension, providing segmented and overall resilience ratings that enable utilities to address critical aspects undermining the service's resilience. An open-source digital tool (RESILISTORM-tool) is also introduced to expedite answering, data integration, and visualization analysis of results.
C1 [Barreiro, Joao; Ferreira, Filipa; Matos, Jose Saldanha] Univ Lisbon, CERIS Civil Engn Res & Innovat Sustainabil, Inst Super Tecn, Av Rovisco Pais, P-1049001 Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Brito, Rita Salgado] Natl Civil Engn Lab, NES Urban Water Unit, Av Brasil 101, P-1700066 Lisbon, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Lisboa; National Civil Engineering Laboratory
RP Barreiro, J (corresponding author), Univ Lisbon, CERIS Civil Engn Res & Innovat Sustainabil, Inst Super Tecn, Av Rovisco Pais, P-1049001 Lisbon, Portugal.
EM joao.barreiro@tecnico.ulisboa.pt; filipamferreira@tecnico.ulisboa.pt;
   rsbrito@lnec.pt; jose.saldanha.matos@tecnico.ulisboa.pt
RI Ferreira, Filipa/AAJ-9672-2021; Brito, Rita/M-6178-2013; Matos,
   Jose/M-5837-2013; Ferreira, Filipa/M-6108-2013
OI Brito, Rita/0000-0002-9573-4562; Barreiro, Joao/0000-0002-9082-5166;
   Matos, Jose/0000-0003-1335-0635; Ferreira, Filipa/0000-0001-9616-295X
FU FCT;  [UIDB/04625/2020]
FX This work is part of the research activity carried out at Civil
   Engineering Research and Innovation for Sustainability (CERIS), and the
   APC was funded by FCT in the framework of project UIDB/04625/2020.
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NR 68
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 9
U2 15
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 3
AR 1316
DI 10.3390/su16031316
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HN4J5
UT WOS:001160166900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kokorsch, M
   Gisladottir, J
AF Kokorsch, Matthias
   Gisladottir, Johanna
TI "You talk of threat, but we think of comfort": the role of place
   attachment in small remote communities in Iceland that experience
   avalanche threat
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Natural hazard; Avalanches; Place attachment; Climate change adaptation;
   Capacity building; Iceland
ID RISK
AB According to the Icelandic Meteorological Office, climate change may increase the likelihood, intensity, and frequency of some natural hazards in the country, such as avalanches. It is therefore essential to increase preparedness for climate change-related effects. Until recently, social and community aspects of climate change-related hazards have not received much attention in Iceland. The aim of this study was to explore the role of place attachment in small remote communities in Iceland and how residents experience the threat of avalanches. Through a narrative approach, we conducted interviews with residents and focus groups in two communities in the Westfjords. Our findings suggest that both communities show a high level of place attachment, in particular with regard to the natural and social dimension. A positive impact of place attachment translates into willingness for volunteering and local engagement, which can increase preparedness and enhance capacity building. While we found negative tendencies of place attachment in both places, for example in that residents do not consider their communities vulnerable despite the risk, they seem to be less prominent than the positive aspects. Residents exhibit traditional local knowledge, but there is a need to better integrate newcomers and foreigners in the communities into emergency planning.
C1 [Kokorsch, Matthias; Gisladottir, Johanna] Univ Ctr Westfjords, Isafjordur, Iceland.
   [Gisladottir, Johanna] Agr Univ Iceland, Reykjavik, Iceland.
RP Kokorsch, M (corresponding author), Univ Ctr Westfjords, Isafjordur, Iceland.
EM matthias@uw.is
OI Kokorsch, Matthias/0000-0003-2220-8323; Gisladottir,
   Johanna/0000-0001-9540-200X
FU We would like to extend gratitude to all the individuals that took part
   in the research.
FX We would like to extend gratitude to all the individuals that took part
   in the research.
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NR 50
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 1
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 23
IS 4
AR 150
DI 10.1007/s10113-023-02144-w
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA X8MS2
UT WOS:001100929600001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Caloir, BEG
   Abebe, YA
   Vojinovic, Z
   Sanchez, A
   Mubeen, A
   Ruangpan, L
   Manojlovic, N
   Plavsic, J
   Djordjevic, S
AF Gutierrez Caloir, Beatriz Emma
   Abebe, Yared Abayneh
   Vojinovic, Zoran
   Sanchez, Arlex
   Mubeen, Adam
   Ruangpan, Laddaporn
   Manojlovic, Natasa
   Plavsic, Jasna
   Djordjevic, Slobodan
TI Combining machine learning and spatial data processing techniques for
   allocation of large-scale nature-based solutions
SO BLUE-GREEN SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE flood risk reduction; large-scale nature-based solutions; machine
   learning; NBS planning; spatial data processing
AB The escalating impacts of climate change trigger the necessity to deal with hydro-meteorological hazards. Nature-based solutions (NBSs) seem to be a suitable response, integrating the hydrology, geomorphology, hydraulic, and ecological dynamics. While there are some methods and tools for suitability mapping of small-scale NBSs, literature concerning the spatial allocation of large-scale NBSs is still lacking. The present work aims to develop new toolboxes and enhance an existing methodology by developing spatial analysis tools within a geographic information system (GIS) environment to allocate large-scale NBSs based on a multi-criteria algorithm. The methodologies combine machine learning spatial data processing techniques and hydrodynamic modelling for allocation of large-scale NBSs. The case studies concern selected areas in the Netherlands, Serbia, and Bolivia, focusing on three large-scale NBS: rainwater harvesting, wetland restoration, and natural riverbank stabilisation. Information available from the EC H2020 RECONECT project as well as other available data for the specific study areas was used. The research highlights the significance of incorporating machine learning, GIS, and remote sensing techniques for the suitable allocation of large-scale NBSs. The findings may offer new insights for decision-makers and other stakeholders involved in future sustainable environmental planning and climate change adaptation.
C1 [Gutierrez Caloir, Beatriz Emma] IHE Delft Inst Water Educ, Water Sci & Engn Hydroinformat Dept, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Abebe, Yared Abayneh; Vojinovic, Zoran; Sanchez, Arlex; Mubeen, Adam; Ruangpan, Laddaporn] IHE Delft Inst Water Educ, Water Supply Sanitat & Environm Engn Dept, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Abebe, Yared Abayneh] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Civil Engn & Geosci, Dept Hydraul Engn, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Vojinovic, Zoran; Plavsic, Jasna] Univ Belgrade, Fac Civil Engn, Belgrade, Serbia.
   [Vojinovic, Zoran; Djordjevic, Slobodan] Univ Exeter, Coll Engn Math & Phys, Exeter EX4 4QF, England.
   [Mubeen, Adam; Ruangpan, Laddaporn] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Appl Sci, Delft, Netherlands.
   [Manojlovic, Natasa] Hamburg Univ Technol, Inst River & Coastal Engn, Hamburg, Germany.
C3 IHE Delft Institute for Water Education; IHE Delft Institute for Water
   Education; Delft University of Technology; University of Belgrade;
   University of Exeter; Delft University of Technology; Hamburg University
   of Technology
RP Ruangpan, L (corresponding author), IHE Delft Inst Water Educ, Water Supply Sanitat & Environm Engn Dept, Delft, Netherlands.; Ruangpan, L (corresponding author), Delft Univ Technol, Fac Appl Sci, Delft, Netherlands.
EM l.ruangpan@un-ihe.org
RI ; Djordjevic, Slobodan/P-8853-2015; Plavsic, Jasna/B-9203-2018
OI Gutierrez Caloir, Beatriz Emma/0000-0002-5663-5377; Djordjevic,
   Slobodan/0000-0003-1682-1383; Plavsic, Jasna/0000-0001-9679-8851;
   Ruangpan, Laddaporn/0000-0002-7803-0600; Mubeen,
   Adam/0000-0003-1934-6813
FU European Union [776866]
FX The research leading to these results has been conducted within the
   European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under
   grant agreement No. 776866 for the research project RECONECT. The study
   reflects only the authors' views, and the European Union is not liable
   for any use that may be made of the information contained herein.
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NR 36
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 18
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
EI 2617-4782
J9 BLUE-GREEN SYST
JI Blue-Green Syst.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 5
IS 2
BP 186
EP 199
DI 10.2166/bgs.2023.040
EA NOV 2023
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA DD4L7
UT WOS:001105142500001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Baanu, BB
   Babu, KSJ
AF Baanu, B. Bharani
   Babu, K. S. Jinesh
TI Irrigation water quality from wastewater reuse or groundwater sources:
   bridging the water-nutrient-food nexus
SO AQUA-WATER INFRASTRUCTURE ECOSYSTEMS AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; crop nutrition; reclaimed water irrigation;
   water reuse
ID SEED-GERMINATION; SOIL; YIELD; CONTAMINATION; TEMPERATURE; CULTIVATION;
   BENEFIT; GROWTH
AB A field study is done to analyze the effects of water reuse for irrigation with a focus on seed germination, crop morphology, crop yield, nutritional values of edible parts, fertilizer reduction, and benefit-cost ratio. For the study, three different crops, Lablab bean, tomato, and chilli, are considered and every crop type is irrigated with groundwater (GW), diluted treated wastewater (DTWW), and treated wastewater (TWW). The study reveals that the DTWW is optimal for seed germination. Crops irrigated with the TWW have the highest morphological characteristics. Crop yield is highest for the TWW-irrigated Lablab bean and DTWW-irrigated tomato. Chilli remains unproductive until the end due to thermal stress. Nutritional values of the edible parts of the DTWW- and TWW-irrigated crops are lower than the GW-irrigated crops. Crops irrigated with the DTWW and TWW are applied with the reduced quantities of N, P and K fertilizers. Indeed, even when the dosages are low those crops are able to produce higher yields than the GW-irrigated crops which are applied with full fertilization. As the crop yield is high and fertilizer cost is less, the benefit-cost ratio is higher for water reuse irrigation than the GW irrigation.
C1 [Baanu, B. Bharani; Babu, K. S. Jinesh] Mepco Schlenk Engn Coll, Dept Civil Engn, Sivakasi 626005, Tamil Nadu, India.
C3 Mepco Schlenk Engineering College
RP Babu, KSJ (corresponding author), Mepco Schlenk Engn Coll, Dept Civil Engn, Sivakasi 626005, Tamil Nadu, India.
EM dr.ksjinesh@gmail.com
RI Balaguru, Bharani/HMV-4289-2023; Babu, K.S.Jinesh/T-2441-2019
OI Babu, K.S.Jinesh/0000-0001-9184-920X
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NR 80
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 6
U2 12
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2709-8028
EI 2709-8036
J9 AQUA-UK
JI AQUA
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 72
IS 12
BP 2377
EP 2395
DI 10.2166/aqua.2023.390
EA NOV 2023
PG 19
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA CX7K3
UT WOS:001101387000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kliem, L
   Sagebiel, J
AF Kliem, Lea
   Sagebiel, Julian
TI Consumers' preferences for commons-based and open-source produce: A
   discrete choice experiment with directional information manipulations
SO FOOD POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Food choices; Germany; Information effects; Mixed logit model; Seed
   commons; Sustainable consumption; Vegetable varieties; Willingness to
   pay
ID WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; ORGANIC FOOD; DECISION-MAKING; CARBON LABELS; LOCAL
   FOOD; DIVERSITY; QUALITY
AB The increasing privatization of seeds and varieties through intellectual property rights such as patents and exclusive seed multiplication rights has led to power imbalances and contributes to the continuous decline of genetic diversity. Diversified agricultural systems are, however, essential for climate change adaptation and the long-term resilience of our food systems. Common ownership of seeds and varieties can play a central role in supporting the development of diversified agricultural systems. With the first commons/open-source varieties entering consumer markets, consumer preferences and willingness-to-pay (WTP) for these varieties are worth exploring. On the example of tomatoes, we carried out a representative consumer survey with a discrete choice experiment. We find that consumers prefer commons/open-source varieties to company-owned varieties and are willing to pay a premium for these varieties. However, the premium they are willing to pay is smaller than for locally grown and organic produce. Providing additional information on the advantages of commons/open-source varieties positively affects WTP. There are no differences in WTP values for 'commons varieties' and 'open-source varieties'. Our findings contribute to academic and policy discourses on consumers' role in agro-biodiversity conservation and enhancement.
C1 [Kliem, Lea] Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Dept Business Adm Econ & Law, Oldenburg, Germany.
   [Kliem, Lea] Inst Ecol Econ Res, Berlin, Germany.
   [Sagebiel, Julian] German Ctr Integrat Biodivers Res iDiv, Halle Jena Leipzig, Germany.
   [Kliem, Lea] IOW, Potsdamer Str 105, D-10785 Berlin, Germany.
C3 Carl von Ossietzky Universitat Oldenburg
RP Kliem, L (corresponding author), IOW, Potsdamer Str 105, D-10785 Berlin, Germany.
EM lea.kliem@ioew.de
RI Sagebiel, Julian/I-5888-2019
OI Kliem, Dr. Lea/0000-0001-8413-7773; Sagebiel, Julian/0000-0002-0253-6875
FU German Federal Ministry of Edu-cation and Research (BMBF) , as part of
   the program on Research for sustainable development' (FONA) [01UU1602C]
FX This work was supported by the German Federal Ministry of Edu-cation and
   Research (BMBF) , as part of the program on Research for sustainable
   development' (FONA) under Grant 01UU1602C.
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NR 94
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 10
U2 24
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0306-9192
EI 1873-5657
J9 FOOD POLICY
JI Food Policy
PD AUG
PY 2023
VL 119
AR 102501
DI 10.1016/j.foodpol.2023.102501
EA JUL 2023
PG 13
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Economics; Food Science & Technology;
   Nutrition & Dietetics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics; Food Science & Technology; Nutrition
   & Dietetics
GA O3WQ4
UT WOS:001043157500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Oksas, O
AF Oksas, Olgay
TI Carbon emission strategies for container handling equipment using the
   activity-based method: A case study of Ambarl? container port in Turkiye
SO MARINE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Marine environment; Greenhouse gases; Carbon emissions; Container ports;
   Container handling equipment; Port of Ambarl?
AB One of the most important components of a port's sustainability is its environmental impact. Port operators are currently focusing on the sustainable development of ports to measure this environmental impact and determine the emissions inventory. To combat climate change globally, Turkiye envisages reduction of its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions rate by 21% until 2030. In line with this target, container ports are also focusing on the sus-tainability of their environmental impact and determining their emissions inventory. This study aims to estimate the total carbon emissions produced by the container handling equipment (CHE) used in the container port operations and to plan the carbon emission reduction strategy as concerns the climate change adaptation policy. The Ambarli container port, which handles approximately 30% of Turkiye's total container volume, has been chosen as the application area of this case study. Carbon emissions from CHE vehicles in the port were estimated using the activity-based method. The carbon emission value per TEU in 2021 is calculated as 0.011335 tCO2e/ TEU. Carbon emission reduction scenarios were created at two-year intervals until 2030. It has been determined that the dominant contribution to carbon emission in the container port is provided by terminal tractors that consume diesel fuel.
C1 [Oksas, Olgay] Istanbul Univ Cerrahpasa, Maritime Transportat Management Engn Fac Engn, TR-34320 I?stanbul, Turkiye.
C3 Istanbul University - Cerrahpasa
RP Oksas, O (corresponding author), Istanbul Univ Cerrahpasa, Maritime Transportat Management Engn Fac Engn, TR-34320 I?stanbul, Turkiye.
EM olgay.oksas@iuc.edu.tr
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NR 53
TC 11
Z9 13
U1 19
U2 66
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0308-597X
EI 1872-9460
J9 MAR POLICY
JI Mar. Pol.
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 149
AR 105480
DI 10.1016/j.marpol.2023.105480
EA JAN 2023
PG 11
WC Environmental Studies; International Relations
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; International Relations
GA 8G5LH
UT WOS:000920385900001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lerer, SM
   Guidje, AH
   Drenck, KML
   Jakobsen, CC
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, K
   Mikkelsen, PS
   Sorup, HJD
AF Lerer, Sara Maria
   Guidje, Alexandre Hallkvist
   Drenck, Karin Margrethe Loef
   Jakobsen, Camilla Christiane
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten
   Mikkelsen, Peter Steen
   Sorup, Hjalte Jomo Danielsen
TI Constructing an inventory for fast screening of hydraulic and hydrologic
   performance of stormwater control measures
SO BLUE-GREEN SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Nature-Based Solutions; SWMM; urban water management; water balance
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SENSITIVE URBAN DESIGN; MANAGEMENT; TOOLS;
   CONTEXT; MODEL
AB Stormwater control measures (SCMs) are effective and sustainable complementary means of managing stormwater in cities. Unlike underground drainage systems, they require space on the city surface, and therefore must be included in initial sketches of urban planning and design. These initial sketches are often made by architects and urban planners, who are usually not trained in hydrology, and therefore require simple and robust tools to inform their initial plans with respect to stormwater management. There may be local guidelines for dimensioning SCMs, but their applicability is often limited with regard to the range of SCMs, and the methodology behind them may be oversimplified, including a lack of assessment of benefits on the urban hydrological cycle. We developed a methodology for estimating multiple performance indicators of a wide range of SCMs and applied it to Danish meteorological conditions. The methodology includes consulting expected end users, configuring an SWMM model for each SCM type and choosing applicable parameter ranges, running multiple simulations for each type covering the parameter space, and post-processing the results using python and PySWMM. The outputs can be used to draw general recommendations regarding effective application ranges for different SCMs, and to quickly assess the performance of case-specific configurations.
C1 [Lerer, Sara Maria; Guidje, Alexandre Hallkvist; Drenck, Karin Margrethe Loef; Jakobsen, Camilla Christiane; Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten; Mikkelsen, Peter Steen; Sorup, Hjalte Jomo Danielsen] Tech Univ Denmark, DTU Sustain Dept Environm & Resource Engn, Lyngby, Denmark.
   [Lerer, Sara Maria] CALGO Aps, Aarhus, Denmark.
   [Guidje, Alexandre Hallkvist; Jakobsen, Camilla Christiane] Ramboll Denmark AS, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Drenck, Karin Margrethe Loef] LNH Water, Tikob, Denmark.
C3 Technical University of Denmark
RP Sorup, HJD (corresponding author), Tech Univ Denmark, DTU Sustain Dept Environm & Resource Engn, Lyngby, Denmark.
EM hjds@env.dtu.dk
RI Sørup, Hjalte/R-5263-2018; Mikkelsen, Peter Steen/D-9691-2011;
   Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Karsten/J-7792-2012
OI Mikkelsen, Peter Steen/0000-0003-3799-0493; Arnbjerg-Nielsen,
   Karsten/0000-0002-6221-9505; Sorup, Hjalte Jomo
   Danielsen/0000-0002-7110-6975
FU Danish Ecoinnovation Program (MUDP) [MST-117-00555]; European Union
   [776866]
FX This work was accomplished largely as part of the project SCALGO + NBS,
   which was supported by the Danish Ecoinnovation Program (MUDP) grant
   number MST-117-00555. Furthermore, K.A.-N. and H.J.D.S. received funding
   through the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation
   Program under grant agreement No. 776866 for the RECONECT (Regenerating
   ECOsystems with Nature-Based Solutions for hydro-meteorological risk
   rEduCTion) project.
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NR 44
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 14
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
EI 2617-4782
J9 BLUE-GREEN SYST
JI Blue-Green Syst.
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 4
IS 2
BP 213
EP 229
DI 10.2166/bgs.2022.018
EA NOV 2022
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA 7G7GX
UT WOS:000890788600001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gaworek-Michalczenia, MF
   Sallu, SM
   Di Gregorio, M
   Doggart, N
   Mbogo, J
AF Gaworek-Michalczenia, M. F.
   Sallu, S. M.
   Di Gregorio, M.
   Doggart, N.
   Mbogo, J.
TI Evaluating the impact of adaptation interventions on vulnerability and
   livelihood resilience
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; maladaptation; BACI research design;
   evaluation framework; equitable adaptation
ID EAST USAMBARA MOUNTAINS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; ADAPTIVE
   CAPACITY; HOUSEHOLD; FRAMEWORK; COMMUNITY; INDICATORS; SYSTEMS; DESIGN
AB Robust evaluation of adaptation interventions is necessary to monitor adaptation projects and ensure broader accountability in adaptation responses. Yet, to date very few frameworks are formulated with a robust impact assessment in mind. This study uses the Before-After-Control-Impact (BACI) research design to develop the BACI Adaptation Impact Evaluation Framework. The framework compares participating and non-participating households across time and was applied to panel data of 291 households, combined with ethnographic data, to evaluate the impacts of one of the Global Climate Change Alliance's (GCCA+) flagship adaptation and resilience projects in Tanzania. The results illustrate various benefits of the project, including strengthening social networks, providing education and diversifying information sources among the participating households. However, evidence of unintended consequences and maladaptation also exist, particularly among poorer non-participating households. We conclude that equitable adaptation requires longer projects that better target poorer households, engage with a broader array of climatic events, support the transfer of knowledge into action, and are more responsive to emergent trade-offs, ensuring that unintended impacts are minimized. The paper demonstrates how the application of the BACI Adaptation Impact Evaluation Framework provides a robust tool to assess the impacts of adaptation interventions.
C1 [Gaworek-Michalczenia, M. F.; Sallu, S. M.; Di Gregorio, M.] Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Sustainabil Res Inst, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Doggart, N.; Mbogo, J.] Tanzania Forest Conservat Grp, Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania.
C3 University of Leeds
RP Gaworek-Michalczenia, MF (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Sustainabil Res Inst, Leeds LS2 9JT, W Yorkshire, England.
EM eemfgm@leeds.ac.uk
RI Doggart, Nike/IAR-9498-2023; Sallu, Susannah/T-9318-2019;
   Gaworek-Michalczenia, Marta/GWZ-1658-2022
OI Sallu, Susannah/0000-0002-1471-2485
FU Economic and Social Research Council's White Rose Collaborative Doctoral
   Studentship programme in the UK [ES/J500215/1]; EU; Centre for Climate
   Change Economics and Policy (CCCEP) - UK Economic and Social Research
   Council [ES/K006576/1]; Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research
   Council, Global Challenges Research Fund AFRICAP programme
   [BB/P027784/1]; ESRC [ES/K006576/1] Funding Source: UKRI; UKRI
   [BB/P027784/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX The research was funded by the Economic and Social Research Council's
   White Rose Collaborative Doctoral Studentship programme in the UK [grant
   ES/J500215/1] with contributions from the EU-funded GCCA+ Tanzania
   programme and the Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy (CCCEP)
   funded by the UK Economic and Social Research Council [grant
   ES/K006576/1]. Time of Sallu has also been supported by Biotechnology
   and Biological Sciences Research Council as part of the Global
   Challenges Research Fund AFRICAP programme [grant BB/P027784/1]. This
   research was conducted under COSTECH research permit numbers:
   2018-80-NA-2017-340 and 2019-100-NA-2017-46.
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NR 97
TC 9
Z9 10
U1 2
U2 46
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD NOV 26
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 10
BP 867
EP 883
DI 10.1080/17565529.2021.2018987
EA FEB 2022
PG 17
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6V0SK
UT WOS:000751739300001
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Antich-Homar, H
   Hess, K
   Solaun, K
   Alleng, G
   Flores, A
AF Antich-Homar, Helena
   Hess, Katharina
   Solaun, Kepa
   Alleng, Gerard
   Flores, Adrian
TI An Integrated Approach for Evaluating Climate Change Risks: A Case Study
   in Suriname
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; climate change adaptation; Small Island Developing
   States
ID ISLAND DEVELOPING STATES; ADAPTATION
AB This paper combines long-term state-of-the-art climate projections and indices to provide detailed insights into the future climate of Suriname to facilitate comprehensive information of areas and sectors at high climate risk for political decision-making. The study analyses Suriname's historical climate (1990-2014) and provides climate projections for three time horizons (2020-2044, 2045-2069, 2070-2094) and two emissions scenarios (intermediate/SSP2-4.5 and severe/SSP5-8.5). Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP6) modeling is used to analyze changes in sea level, temperature, precipitation, relative humidity, and winds. In addition, risk impact chains were produced for the country's four most important socio-economic sectors: agriculture and fisheries, forestry, water, and infrastructure. Results show the temperature is expected to increase for all regions and timeframes, reaching warming up to 6 degrees C in the southern region in the long-term future (2070-2094). Projections point towards a reduction in precipitation in the southwest and coastal regions and a rise in mean sea level. Regarding risk, Paramaribo and Wanica face the highest climate risk. Coronie and Nickerie face the least climate risk. These regions remain the most and least vulnerable in both the SSP2-4.5 and SSP5-8.5 scenarios, but overall values of their risk indices increase substantially over time.
C1 [Antich-Homar, Helena] Meteoclim, Parc BIT, Sophie Germain S-N,Lleret Bldg, Palma De Mallorca, Spain.
   [Hess, Katharina] Minist Transport Baden Wurttemberg, Climate Prot Transport, D-70173 Stuttgart, Germany.
   [Solaun, Kepa] Univ Navarra, Sch Sci, Campus Univ, Pamplona 31080, Spain.
   [Solaun, Kepa] Global Factor, Colon Larreategui,26,Planta 1, Bilbao 48009, Spain.
   [Alleng, Gerard; Flores, Adrian] Inter American Dev Bank, Climate Change Div, New York Ave NW 1300, Washington, DC 20577 USA.
C3 University of Navarra
RP Solaun, K (corresponding author), Univ Navarra, Sch Sci, Campus Univ, Pamplona 31080, Spain.; Solaun, K (corresponding author), Global Factor, Colon Larreategui,26,Planta 1, Bilbao 48009, Spain.
EM helena.antich@wdna.com; hess.katharina0@gmail.com;
   ksolaun@globalfactor.com; gerarda@iadb.org; adrianfl@iadb.org
OI Solaun, Kepa/0000-0003-1041-8825; Flores, Adrian/0000-0002-0837-116X;
   Antich Homar, Helena/0000-0002-2915-2150
FU Inter-America Development Bank (IDB) as part of the Technical
   Cooperation "Mainstreaming Climate Change in Sustainable Decision-Making
   Tools" [SU-T1117]
FX This research was funded by the Inter-America Development Bank (IDB) as
   part of the Technical Cooperation "Mainstreaming Climate Change in
   Sustainable Decision-Making Tools" (SU-T1117).
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NR 41
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 9
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 3
AR 1463
DI 10.3390/su14031463
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YZ1YV
UT WOS:000755279900001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Duka, S
   Vallja, L
   Vasjari, M
   Shehu, A
   Broli, N
AF Duka, Sonila
   Vallja, Loreta
   Vasjari, Majlinda
   Shehu, Alma
   Broli, Nevila
TI SEASONAL VARIATION OF LAMPARELLI TROPHIC STATE INDEX (TSI) IN KUNE
   -VAINI LAGOON SYSTEM
SO FRESENIUS ENVIRONMENTAL BULLETIN
LA English
DT Article
DE Lezha lagoons; Kune-Vaini project; Lamparelli trophic state index
ID NUTRIENT DYNAMICS; WATER-QUALITY
AB Kune - Vaini Lagoon System (KVLS), located within the Drini Mati River Delta in the Lezha region of Albania, provides a wide range of valuable goods and services to nearby communities. A rapid increase in population size and widespread poverty in the area have led to an increase in pressure on the lagoon for ecosystem goods and services, and to unplanned alterations in the buffer zone surrounding the lagoon.
   Unsustainable resources use within the KVLS is also causing a reduction in quality and quantity of water in the KVLS affecting lagoon productivity, increased coastal flooding and increased sand dune erosion. In order to address this problem. Kune Vaini Lagoons System is vulnerable to the effects of climate change and is expected to experience more intense and frequent floods and storm surges [1].
   This study was realised in the framework of ongoing project "Climate changes adaption interventions of the Kune-Vaini lagoon system (Lezha, Albania) - ecological approach". Field work was done from July 2018 to July 2019. with an interval of approximately of two month. Sampling took place in five station wich were selected to represent the water quality of Kune-Vaini lagoon system.
   This study aimed to evaluate seasonal variation of the TSI reported by Lamparelli, using specific TSI values of the total phosphorus (TP) and chlorophyll a (Chl a).
C1 [Duka, Sonila; Vallja, Loreta; Vasjari, Majlinda; Shehu, Alma; Broli, Nevila] Tirana Univ, Fac Nat Sci, Dept Chem, City Tirana, Albania.
C3 University of Tirana (UT)
RP Duka, S (corresponding author), Tirana Univ, Dept Chem, City Tirana, Albania.
EM sonila.duka@fshn.edu.al
FU UNEP; GEF; Albanian Government; Administration of the Protected Area,
   Lezha
FX The study was part of the Kune-Vaini project (http://kunevain.coini),
   funded by UNEP, GEF and the Albanian Government. We are also grateful
   for the cooperation and support given by the Administration of the
   Protected Area, Lezha, and for the cooperation between the group of
   experts of chemistry and biology in Faculty of Natural Sciences. Tirana.
   Albania.
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NR 11
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 5
PU PARLAR SCIENTIFIC PUBLICATIONS (P S P)
PI FREISING
PA ANGERSTR. 12, 85354 FREISING, GERMANY
SN 1018-4619
EI 1610-2304
J9 FRESEN ENVIRON BULL
JI Fresenius Environ. Bull.
PY 2021
VL 30
IS 7
BP 8690
EP 8695
PG 6
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TN0CK
UT WOS:000675912500081
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Markou, M
   Moraiti, CA
   Stylianou, A
   Papadavid, G
AF Markou, Marinos
   Moraiti, Cleopatra A.
   Stylianou, Andreas
   Papadavid, George
TI Addressing Climate Change Impacts on Agriculture: Adaptation Measures
   For Six Crops in Cyprus
SO ATMOSPHERE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate resilience; crops; Mediterranean agriculture; irrigation
   measures
ID OLEA-EUROPAEA L.; WATER-USE EFFICIENCY; DEFICIT IRRIGATION; CONSERVATION
   AGRICULTURE; GROWTH; MANAGEMENT; PERFORMANCE; YIELD; MODEL; STRATEGIES
AB The agricultural sector of Cyprus is seriously affected by climate change impacts. In the framework of the ADAPT2CLIMA project, the available techniques and methods implemented worldwide for the adaptation of six crops (wheat, barley, potatoes, tomatoes, grapes, and olives) to climate change impacts were thoroughly assessed. The identified adaptation options were categorized according to the climate change impact they address as follows: measures against drought stress, heat stress, decreasing plant health, extreme weather events and reduced crop productivity. Another category that refers to measures that address more than one category of climate change was also added. The evaluation of the identified adaptation options was based on a self-administered semi-structured questionnaire. The identified adaptation measures were graded according to the following criteria: efficiency of the measure, urgency of implementing the measure, usefulness of implementation irrespective of climate change, technical difficulty, contribution to climate change adaptation, economic viability and social acceptance. Fifty-six respondents (experts and stakeholders) filled the questionnaire, suggesting twelve recommended adaptation measures (with high score >= 60%), which mainly refer to irrigation adaptation measures, cultural practices, and methods for upgrading external services to farmers. The recommended adaptation measures for Cyprus are thoroughly presented and discussed.
C1 [Markou, Marinos; Stylianou, Andreas; Papadavid, George] Minist Agr, Rural Dev & Environm, Agr Res Inst, CY-1516 Nicosia, Cyprus.
   [Moraiti, Cleopatra A.] Univ Thessaly, Dept Agr Crop Prod & Rural Environm, Lab Entomol & Agr Zool, Volos 38221, Greece.
C3 University of Thessaly
RP Moraiti, CA (corresponding author), Univ Thessaly, Dept Agr Crop Prod & Rural Environm, Lab Entomol & Agr Zool, Volos 38221, Greece.
EM markou@ari.gov.cy; cmoraiti@gmail.com; a.stylianou@ari.gov.cy;
   G.Papadavid@ari.gov.cy
RI Stylianou, Andreas/AAB-7179-2022; Markou, Marinos/M-6447-2013
OI Stylianou, Andreas/0000-0002-2611-4319; Markou,
   Marinos/0000-0002-8067-7331
FU European financial instrument for the Environment, LIFE [LIFE14
   CCA/GR/000928]
FX This research was funded by the European financial instrument for the
   Environment, LIFE in the framework of the ADAPT2CLIMA project "LIFE14
   CCA/GR/000928".
CR ADAPT2CLIMA, REP EST FUT CLIM CHA
   ADAPT2CLIMA, REV ASS NAT EUR LEG
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NR 60
TC 21
Z9 22
U1 2
U2 16
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4433
J9 ATMOSPHERE-BASEL
JI Atmosphere
PD MAY
PY 2020
VL 11
IS 5
AR 483
DI 10.3390/atmos11050483
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA MA3EZ
UT WOS:000541801900092
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Latifi, S
   Hauser, M
   Raheli, H
   Moghaddam, SM
   Viira, AH
   Ozuyar, PG
   Azadi, H
AF Latifi, Somaye
   Hauser, Michael
   Raheli, Hossein
   Moghaddam, Saghi Movahhed
   Viira, Ants-Hannes
   Ozuyar, Pinar Gokcin
   Azadi, Hossein
TI Impacts of organizational arrangements on conservation agriculture:
   insights from interpretive structural modeling in Iran
SO AGROECOLOGY AND SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainable development; participatory research; qualitative data
   analysis; sustainable farming; MIMAC analysis
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ADOPTION; FARMERS; BARRIERS; SYSTEMS;
   MITIGATION; PROSPECTS; AFRICA; POLICY; INDIA
AB Conservation agriculture (CA) has been promoted worldwide as an approach to sustainable resource management and better productivity. Promotion and adoption of CA in Iran have been receiving increased attention from the national government over recent years. Therefore, to speed up development of CA as a basis for sustainable development, drivers that influence the development of CA need to be identified and modeled. The main aim of this study is to present a comprehensive model for CA development in Iran by identifying the institutional drivers that influence its promotion and determining the relationship between drivers. At first, the drivers identified from the literature and interviews with experts, and the relationships among the drivers were explored and clarified using Interpretative Structural Modeling (ISM). A cross-impact matrix multiplication was applied to classification (MICMAC) analysis, which was then used to categorize the drivers in four sub-groups. The results showed that creating a suitable organizational structure is a very significant driving factor for CA development in Iran. Strong driving power and weak dependence associated with this factor should be treated as a critical driver. If CA shall expand more rapidly in future, then Iran's government should invest in an appropriate organizational structure for it.
C1 [Latifi, Somaye; Raheli, Hossein] Univ Tabriz, Fac Agr, Dept Extens & Rural Dev, Tabriz, Iran.
   [Hauser, Michael] Int Crop Res Inst Semiarid Trop ICRISAT, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Hauser, Michael] Univ Nat Resources & Life Sci, Vienna, Austria.
   [Moghaddam, Saghi Movahhed] Shahid Beheshti Univ, Environm Sci Res Inst, Dept Agroecol, Tehran, Iran.
   [Viira, Ants-Hannes] Estonian Univ Life Sci, Inst Econ & Social Sci, Tartu, Estonia.
   [Ozuyar, Pinar Gokcin] Istinye Univ, Fac Econ Adm & Social Sci, Istanbul, Turkey.
   [Azadi, Hossein] Univ Hamburg, Inst Geog, Res Grp Climate Change & Secur, Hamburg, Germany.
   [Azadi, Hossein] Czech Univ Life Sci Prague, Fac Environm Sci, Prague, Czech Republic.
C3 University of Tabriz; BOKU University; Shahid Beheshti University;
   Estonian University of Life Sciences; Istinye University; University of
   Hamburg; Czech University of Life Sciences Prague
RP Azadi, H (corresponding author), Univ Ghent, Dept Geog, Ghent, Belgium.
EM hossein.azadi@ugent.be
RI Movahhed Moghaddam, Saghi/GXH-9384-2022; Ozuyar, Pinar/Y-2189-2018;
   Azadi, Hossein/E-2361-2011
OI Viira, Ants-Hannes/0000-0002-4672-3816; Movahhed Moghaddam,
   Saghi/0000-0002-2809-9693; OZUYAR, PINAR/0000-0002-2505-2216
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NR 76
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 2
U2 11
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 2168-3565
EI 2168-3573
J9 AGROECOL SUST FOOD
JI Agroecol. Sustain. Food Syst.
PD JAN 2
PY 2021
VL 45
IS 1
BP 86
EP 110
DI 10.1080/21683565.2020.1751375
EA APR 2020
PG 25
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; Green & Sustainable Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA PN3AR
UT WOS:000531982600001
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Byrne, R
   Byrne, S
   Ryan, R
   O'Regan, B
AF Byrne, Rosemary
   Byrne, Susan
   Ryan, Ray
   O'Regan, Bernadette
TI Applying the Q-method to identify primary motivation factors and
   barriers to communities in achieving decarbonisation goals
SO ENERGY POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate policy; Community action; Q-method; Barriers to action;
   Sustainable development
ID RENEWABLE ELECTRICITY POLICY; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABLE
   ENERGY; UK HOUSEHOLDS; COLLABORATIVE GOVERNANCE; PUBLIC-PARTICIPATION;
   ENGAGEMENT; CARBON; TRANSITIONS; PERSPECTIVES
AB It has been predicted that despite previous reductions, greenhouse gas emissions in Ireland will continue to increase above current levels for the next 20 years. The benefit of mobilising community level action in addressing climate change action has already been seen in many European countries. While Irish governmental policy envisions as necessary greater community involvement in energy projects and other efforts to reduce carbon emissions, little progress has been encouraging or supporting such action. Using the Q-method, this study examined and identified where commonalities exist in Irish communities that have successfully implemented sustainable development goals, in terms of their motivation, attitudes, perceived barriers and opportunities for continued action. Results indicate that participants' main motivations are derived from a sense of responsibility to future generations and the need to live more balanced lifestyles. Results further suggest that short-term central government strategy, poor support, bureaucracy, and a lack of collaboration are seen as key limitations in developing and achieving effective community level sustainability action. This study contributes in understanding how climate change policy can be aligned to the preferred future vision of communities in bringing about effective change in transitioning to a low-carbon society.
C1 [Byrne, Rosemary; Byrne, Susan; Ryan, Ray; O'Regan, Bernadette] Univ Limerick, Ctr Environm Res, Limerick V94 T9PX, Ireland.
C3 University of Limerick
RP Byrne, R (corresponding author), Univ Limerick, Ctr Environm Res, Limerick V94 T9PX, Ireland.
EM rosemary.byrne@ul.ie
RI O'Regan, Bernadette/AAZ-6124-2020
OI O'Regan, Bernadette/0000-0002-5873-6390; Byrne,
   Rosemary/0000-0002-6949-4577
FU Irish Research Council [GOIPG/2015/3759]; Irish Research Council (IRC)
   [GOIPG/2015/3759] Funding Source: Irish Research Council (IRC)
FX This work was supported by the Irish Research Council (GOIPG/2015/3759).
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NR 126
TC 18
Z9 18
U1 2
U2 41
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0301-4215
EI 1873-6777
J9 ENERG POLICY
JI Energy Policy
PD NOV
PY 2017
VL 110
BP 40
EP 50
DI 10.1016/j.enpol.2017.08.007
PG 11
WC Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FP5LK
UT WOS:000417660800005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Barron, S
   Canete, G
   Carmichael, J
   Flanders, D
   Pond, E
   Sheppard, S
   Tatebe, K
AF Barron, Sara
   Canete, Glenis
   Carmichael, Jeff
   Flanders, David
   Pond, Ellen
   Sheppard, Stephen
   Tatebe, Kristi
TI A Climate Change Adaptation Planning Process for Low-Lying, Communities
   Vulnerable to Sea Level Rise
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; vulnerability; flooding; inundation;
   planning process; participatory planning; resilience; sea level rise;
   visualization; integrated assessment
AB While the province of British Columbia (BC), Canada, provides guidelines for flood risk management, it is local governments' responsibility to delineate their own flood vulnerability, assess their risk, and integrate these with planning policies to implement adaptive action. However, barriers such as the lack of locally specific data and public perceptions about adaptation options mean that local governments must address the need for adaptation planning within a context of scientific uncertainty, while building public support for difficult choices on flood-related climate policy and action. This research demonstrates a process to model, visualize and evaluate potential flood impacts and adaptation options for the community of Delta, in Metro Vancouver, across economic, social and environmental perspectives. Visualizations in 2D and 3D, based on hydrological modeling of breach events for existing dike infrastructure, future sea level rise and storm surges, are generated collaboratively, together with future adaptation scenarios assessed against quantitative and qualitative indicators. This 'visioning package' is being used with staff and a citizens' Working Group to assess the performance, policy implications and social acceptability of the adaptation strategies. Recommendations based on the experience of the initiative are provided that can facilitate sustainable future adaptation actions and decision-making in Delta and other jurisdictions.
C1 [Barron, Sara; Canete, Glenis; Flanders, David; Sheppard, Stephen; Tatebe, Kristi] Univ British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
   [Carmichael, Jeff] Metro Vancouver, Burnaby, BC V5H 2C8, Canada.
   [Pond, Ellen] Pembina Inst, CALP Affiliate, Vancouver, BC V6B 1A1, Canada.
C3 University of British Columbia
RP Flanders, D (corresponding author), Univ British Columbia, 2321-2260 West Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
EM sara.fryer.barron@gmail.com; gcanete@interchange.ubc.ca;
   jeff.carmichael@metrovancouver.org; david.flanders@ubc.ca;
   ellenp@pembina.org; stephen.sheppard@ubc.ca; Kristine.tatebe@ubc.ca
FU Natural Resources Canada, through the Regional Adaptation Collaborative
   program; GEOmatics for Informed DEcisions (GEOIDE); Networks of Centres
   of Excellence program (NCE) by the Government of Canada
FX This project has involved many people generously sharing their time and
   expertise over many years: The Corporation of Delta for their support.
   Key staff include Hugh Fraser, Mike Brotherston, Angela Danyluk, Thomas
   Leatham, Marcy Sangret, and Lisa King. The Working Group on this project
   included Firth Bateman, Tom Bears, Stuart Bowyer, Robert Butler, Erica
   Crawford-Boettcher, Darrell Desjardin, Angelika Hedley, Carla Marshall,
   Chris Reid, Todd Sinclair, Robert Tremblay, and Paul van Westendorp.
   Jeff Carmichael provided modeling support, scenario development, and
   local government expertise. Civil Servants with the Province of British
   Columbia include Neil Peters, Inspector of Dikes, Jesal Shah at the
   Ministry of Environment and Tina Neale and Jenny Fraser at the Climate
   Action Secretariat. Invaluable technical guidance came from John
   Readshaw (SNC-Lavalin), Thomas Reeve (Delcan), and Stewart Cohen
   (Environment Canada). Funding support was provided by Natural Resources
   Canada, through the Regional Adaptation Collaborative program. We thank
   Jim Vanderwal and the staff at the Fraser Basin Council for
   administering this collaboration. This project was also funded by
   GEOmatics for Informed DEcisions (GEOIDE), a Networks of Centres of
   Excellence program (NCE) by the Government of Canada. Final thanks to
   Adelle Airey, office manager at UBC CALP.
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NR 33
TC 26
Z9 32
U1 2
U2 77
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD SEP
PY 2012
VL 4
IS 9
BP 2176
EP 2208
DI 10.3390/su4092176
PG 33
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 213GE
UT WOS:000324042500012
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kundzewicz, ZW
AF Kundzewicz, ZW
TI Non-structural flood protection and sustainability
SO WATER INTERNATIONAL
LA English
DT Article
DE flood protection; non-structural measures; sustainable development;
   sustainability criteria; risk management
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; TRENDS; MANAGEMENT
AB In this article, flood protection is considered in the context of sustainability. On the one hand, floods destroy human heritage and jeopardize sustainable development, which can be defined as 11 non-decreasing quality of life. " On the other hand, following the most common interpretation of sustainable development, one should not choose flood protection policies that could be rated by future generations as inappropriate options of flood defense. This is how several large structural flood defenses are often viewed. Non-structural measures are in better agreement with the spirit of sustainable development, being more reversible, commonly acceptable, and environment-friendly. Among such measures are source control (watershed/landscape structure management), laws and regulations (including zoning), economic instruments, an efficient flood forecast-warning system, a system of flood risk assessment, awareness raising, flood-related data bases, etc. As flood safety cannot be reached in most vulnerable areas with the help of structural means only, further flood risk reduction via non-structural measures is usually indispensable, and a site-specific mix of structural and non-structural measures seems to be a proper solution. Since sustainabiliiy requires thinking about the future generations, the climate change issue becomes important. Non-structural measures lend themselves well to application in climate change adaptation strategies. As uncertainty in the assessment of climate change impacts is high, flexibility of adaptation strategies is particularly advantageous.
C1 Polish Acad Sci, Res Ctr Agr & Forest Environm, Poznan, Poland.
C3 Polish Academy of Sciences
RP Polish Acad Sci, Res Ctr Agr & Forest Environm, Poznan, Poland.
EM zkundze@man.poznan.pl
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NR 39
TC 123
Z9 134
U1 2
U2 44
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0250-8060
EI 1941-1707
J9 WATER INT
JI Water Int.
PD MAR
PY 2002
VL 27
IS 1
BP 3
EP 13
DI 10.1080/02508060208686972
PG 11
WC Engineering, Civil; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Water Resources
GA 549QL
UT WOS:000175455700002
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Uittenbroek, CJ
   Janssen-Jansen, LB
   Spit, TJM
   Runhaar, HAC
AF Uittenbroek, Caroline J.
   Janssen-Jansen, Leonie B.
   Spit, Tejo J. M.
   Runhaar, Hens A. C.
TI Organizational values and the implications for mainstreaming climate
   adaptation in Dutch municipalities: using Q methodology
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE local government; mainstreaming climate adaptation; organizational
   values; Q methodology; The Netherlands
ID CORE BELIEFS; BARRIERS; PERSPECTIVES; RISK
AB Mainstreaming climate adaptation requires the inclusion of climate adaptation in the policies of various policy domains such as water management and spatial planning. This paper investigates the organizational values present in several municipal policy departments in order to explore their willingness to act upon climate adaptation and the implications for mainstreaming. Q methodology, supplemented by interviews and focus groups, applied in three major Dutch municipalities - Amsterdam, The Hague and Rotterdam - reveals three value patterns: (1) start today; (2) not for us to lead; and (3) shared responsibility. These different value patterns indicate that there is a general agreement on the problem, impacts and solutions, but disagreement on the time frame for action and the allocation of resources. Although all three value patterns are present within departments in each municipality, different value patterns prevail in each municipality. Additionally, the analysis shows barriers as well as opportunities for mainstreaming. A lack of political commitment and leadership, and unsupportive organizational structures, create barriers. In spite of this, there is willingness to act and strategic framing is applied to gain acceptance for the mainstreaming of climate adaptation.
C1 [Uittenbroek, Caroline J.; Spit, Tejo J. M.; Runhaar, Hens A. C.] Univ Utrecht, Fac Geosci, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Janssen-Jansen, Leonie B.] Univ Amsterdam, Fac Social & Behav Sci, NL-1012 WX Amsterdam, Netherlands.
C3 Utrecht University; University of Amsterdam
RP Uittenbroek, CJ (corresponding author), Univ Utrecht, Fac Geosci, POB 80-115, NL-3508 TC Utrecht, Netherlands.
EM c.j.uittenbroek@uu.nl
RI Janssen-Jansen, Leonie/H-4658-2011; Runhaar, Hens/L-5395-2013;
   Uittenbroek, Caroline/C-3186-2017
OI Uittenbroek, Caroline/0000-0003-3191-1707
FU Dutch research programme 'Knowledge for Climate'
FX This research was funded by the Dutch research programme 'Knowledge for
   Climate' (http://knowledgeforclimate.climateresearchnetherlands.nl/). We
   wish to thank the three municipalities and the respondents for their
   cooperation.
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NR 48
TC 19
Z9 20
U1 2
U2 17
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
EI 2408-9354
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PY 2014
VL 5
IS 3
BP 443
EP 456
DI 10.2166/wcc.2014.048
PG 14
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Water Resources
GA AQ9IR
UT WOS:000343165500013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hanifehlou, A
   Hosseini, SA
   Javadi, S
   Sharafati, A
AF Hanifehlou, Abolfazl
   Hosseini, Seyed Abbas
   Javadi, Saman
   Sharafati, Ahmad
TI Sustainable exploitation of groundwater resources considering the
   effects of climate change and land use to provide adaptation solutions
   (case study of the Hashtgerd plain)
SO ACTA GEOPHYSICA
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Land use change; Adaptation; Groundwater level;
   WEAP-MODFLOW
ID CELLULAR-AUTOMATA; WATER-RESOURCES; CHANGE IMPACTS; RECHARGE; DEMAND;
   REGION; COVER
AB Population growth and increasing demand for water have posed a significant challenge to access to safe water resources. Climate change and land use in the not-too-distant future add to the complexity of this challenge. Therefore, it is essential to achieve reliable methods for predicting changes in aquifer storage to plan for the sustainable use of groundwater resources. This study aimed to investigate the management, protection, and sustainable use of groundwater resources under climate change and land use change conditions. In this regard, groundwater supply and demand in one of the important plains in Iran (Hashtgerd plain) for 2020 as the base year was simulated to forecast the trends until 2050 by considering climate change and land use to develop management scenarios to adapt to these conditions using the WEAP model. First, climate change prediction was performed using the HadGEM2-ES model under two emission scenarios, RCP2.6, and RCP8.5, of the IPCC Fifth Assessment Report. The LARS-WG model was used to downscale the climatic data, while land use mapping was performed using Landsat satellite images of 1990, 2005, and 2020 in ENVI 5.3 software. Then, the Markov chain method implemented in TerrSet software was used to model land use change for 2050. The effect of climate change and land use on the decrease of groundwater level was then simulated using the MODFLOW model for the period 2020-2050. In order to manage the water allocation in the area, the information obtained from MODFLOW was transferred to the WEAP model using Link Kitchen interface software. The effects of various management scenarios such as increasing irrigation efficiency, reducing the loss of drinking water distribution networks, and allocating water from the transmission line were evaluated on the adaptation to climate change and land use for a 30-year period. The results showed that with the simultaneous consideration of climate change and land use in the most critical state, the average drop in groundwater level would reach 58 m during the study period, and aquifer reserves will be reduced by more than 50%. The evaluation of management scenarios showed that their implementation not only will protect aquifer reserves but, in addition to meeting 100% of the water needs, will result in sustainable exploitation of groundwater resources.
C1 [Hanifehlou, Abolfazl; Hosseini, Seyed Abbas; Sharafati, Ahmad] Islamic Azad Univ, Sci & Res Branch, Dept Civil Engn, Tehran, Iran.
   [Javadi, Saman] Univ Tehran, Coll Abouraihan, Dept Irrigat & Drainage Engn, Tehran, Iran.
C3 Islamic Azad University; University of Tehran
RP Hosseini, SA (corresponding author), Islamic Azad Univ, Sci & Res Branch, Dept Civil Engn, Tehran, Iran.
EM a_hanifehlou@yahoo.com; abbas_hoseyni@srbiau.ac.ir; javadis@ut.ac.ir;
   asharafati@gmail.com
RI Sharafati, Ahmad/Q-5416-2019; Hosseini, Seyed Abbas/AAO-4039-2021
OI hanifehlou, abolfazl/0000-0001-7388-2241; Hosseini, Seyed
   Abbas/0000-0001-8858-3543; Sharafati, Ahmad/0000-0003-0448-2871
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NR 48
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 13
PU SPRINGER INT PUBL AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1895-6572
EI 1895-7455
J9 ACTA GEOPHYS
JI Acta Geophys.
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 70
IS 4
BP 1829
EP 1846
DI 10.1007/s11600-022-00843-2
EA JUL 2022
PG 18
WC Geochemistry & Geophysics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geochemistry & Geophysics
GA 3B9BX
UT WOS:000819695700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhao, J
   Yang, XG
AF Zhao, Jin
   Yang, Xiaoguang
TI Average Amount and Stability of Available Agro-Climate Resources in the
   Main Maize Cropping Regions in China during 1981-2010
SO JOURNAL OF METEOROLOGICAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE maize; available agro-climate resources; stability; variability
ID SPATIOTEMPORAL CHANGE CHARACTERISTICS; RADIATION-USE EFFICIENCY; PAST 3
   DECADES; YIELD GAPS; CHANGING CLIMATE; WATER REQUIREMENTS; CULTIVAR
   SELECTION; EXTREME WEATHER; SOLAR-RADIATION; WINTER-WHEAT
AB The available agro-climate resources that can be absorbed and converted into dry matter could directly affect crop growth and yield under climate change. Knowledge of the average amount and stability of available agro-climate resources for maize in the main cropping regions of China under climate change is essential for farmers and advisors to optimize cropping choices and develop adaptation strategies under limited resources. In this study, the three main maize cropping regions in China-the North China spring maize region (NCS), the Huanghuaihai summer maize region (HS), and the Southwest China mountain maize region (SCM)-were selected as study regions. Based on observed solar radiation, temperature, and precipitation data, we analyzed the spatial distributions and temporal trends in the available agro-climate resources for maize during 1981-2010. During this period, significantly prolonged climatological growing seasons for maize [3.3, 2.0, and 4.7 day (10 yr)(-1) in NCS, HS, and SCM] were found in all three regions. However, the spatiotemporal patterns of the available agro-climate resources differed among the three regions. The available heating resources for maize increased significantly in the three regions, and the rates of increase were higher in NCS [95.5 degrees C day (10 yr)(-1)] and SCM [93.5 degrees C day (10 yr)(-1)] than that in HS [57.7 degrees C day (10 yr)(-1)]. Meanwhile, decreasing trends in the available water resources were found in NCS [-5.3 mm (10 yr)(-1)] and SCM [-5.8 mm (10 yr)(-1)], whereas an increasing trend was observed in HS [3.0 mm (10 yr)(-1)]. Increasing trends in the available radiation resources were found in NCS [20.9 MJ m(-2) (10 yr)(-1)] and SCM [25.2 MJ m(-2) (10 yr)(-1)], whereas a decreasing trend was found in HS [11.6 MJ m(-2) (10 yr)(-1)]. Compared with 1981-90, the stability of all three resource types decreased during 1991-2000 and 2001-10 in the three regions. More consideration should be placed on the extreme events caused by more intense climate fluctuations. The results can provide guidance in the development of suitable adaptations to climate change in the main maize cropping regions in China.
C1 [Zhao, Jin; Yang, Xiaoguang] China Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
C3 China Agricultural University
RP Yang, XG (corresponding author), China Agr Univ, Coll Resources & Environm Sci, Beijing 100193, Peoples R China.
EM yangxg@cau.edu.cn
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [31471408]; National Key
   Research and Development Program of China [2016YFD0300101]; China
   Postdoctoral Science Fund [2015M580147]
FX Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
   (31471408), National Key Research and Development Program of China
   (2016YFD0300101), and China Postdoctoral Science Fund (2015M580147).
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NR 60
TC 25
Z9 29
U1 4
U2 33
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 2095-6037
EI 2198-0934
J9 J METEOROL RES-PRC
JI J. Meteorol. Res.
PD FEB
PY 2018
VL 32
IS 1
BP 146
EP 156
DI 10.1007/s13351-018-7122-x
PG 11
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA FX7TB
UT WOS:000426292800013
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Vedere, C
   Lebrun, M
   Honvault, N
   Aubertin, ML
   Girardin, C
   Garnier, P
   Dignac, MF
   Houben, D
   Rumpel, C
AF Vedere, Charlotte
   Lebrun, Manhattan
   Honvault, Nicolas
   Aubertin, Marie-Liesse
   Girardin, Cyril
   Garnier, Patricia
   Dignac, Marie-France
   Houben, David
   Rumpel, Cornelia
TI How does soil water status influence the fate of soil organic matter? A
   review of processes across scales
SO EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
LA English
DT Article
DE Carbon sequestration; Organic matter dynamics; Soil water content;
   Organic inputs; Modelling; Climate change
ID ARBUSCULAR MYCORRHIZAL SYMBIOSIS; MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE;
   IRON-PLAQUE-FORMATION; TREATED WASTE-WATER; CARBON STORAGE; AGGREGATE
   STABILITY; DROUGHT TOLERANCE; CO2 EFFLUX; HETEROTROPHIC RESPIRATION;
   MICROSCALE DISTRIBUTION
AB Due to its influence on multiple soil processes, water intervenes in biogeochemical cycles at multiple spatial scales with contrasting effects on soil organic carbon (SOC) dynamics. On all scales, water availability influences biological processes, such as plant growth and (micro-)biological activity, leading to organic matter input, its decomposition and stabilisation. On the other hand, SOC influences soil hydrology via its impact on soil wettability and its structural organisation. Our objectives were to review the mechanisms involved in the complex relationship between water and SOC at different scales and to discuss levers of action to improve its modelling and management. We carried out a systematic review and synthesised the information of 987 articles dealing with SOC sequestration and soil water.At the landscape scale, precipitation levels influence vegetation type and biomass production as well as horizontal and vertical transport, determining SOC stocks and their spatial distribution. At the profile scale, SOC and water both control biological processes including those involved in soil aggregate formation, and organi-sation of soil porosity. Soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition and stabilisation processes occur at the microscale, where water movement facilitates the co-occurrence of SOM and microorganisms.All these multiscale processes may change the nature and distribution of SOM, leading to promotion or in-hibition not only of biogeochemical cycling but also of the water cycle. Taking into account these mutual feedback mechanisms in mechanistic models requires their representation at multiple scales through developing modelling parameters in particular for microbial processes occurring in the pore space. This could greatly reduce modelling uncertainty and improve our understanding of global carbon cycling.Levers of action to improve soil water status and consequently SOC accrual include irrigation, and use of organic amendments. Sustainable agricultural practices should focus on (1) optimising the management of water resources and (2) choosing crop species adapted to various water levels to maintain and foster SOC sequestration, to adapt to climate change and in particular extreme events, such as drought and flooding.
C1 [Vedere, Charlotte; Lebrun, Manhattan; Aubertin, Marie-Liesse; Girardin, Cyril; Garnier, Patricia] Natl Inst Agr Res, Ecosys Soil, UMR INRAE AgroParisTech, F-78820 Thiverval Grignon, France.
   [Honvault, Nicolas] Univ Montpellier, Ecotron Europeen Montpellier, CNRS, Montferrier Sur Lez, France.
   [Honvault, Nicolas; Houben, David] UniLaSalle, AGHYLE, F-60026 Beauvais, France.
   [Aubertin, Marie-Liesse; Dignac, Marie-France; Rumpel, Cornelia] Sorbonne Univ, Inst Ecol & Environm Sci, UMR 7618, CNRS,INRAE,UPEC,IRD, F-75005 Paris, France.
   [Vedere, Charlotte; Rumpel, Cornelia] Sorbonne Univ, 4 Pl Jussieu, F-75005 Paris, France.
C3 INRAE; Universite de Montpellier; Centre National de la Recherche
   Scientifique (CNRS); UniLaSalle; INRAE; Universite Paris Cite;
   AgroParisTech; Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS);
   Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Sorbonne Universite;
   Universite Paris-Est-Creteil-Val-de-Marne (UPEC); CNRS - Institute of
   Ecology & Environment (INEE); Sorbonne Universite
RP Vedere, C; Rumpel, C (corresponding author), Sorbonne Univ, 4 Pl Jussieu, F-75005 Paris, France.
EM charlotte.vedere@sorbonne-universite.fr; lebrun@fzp.czu.cz;
   nicolas.honvault@umontpellier.fr; marie-liesse.aubertin@ifpen.fr;
   cyril.girardin@inrae.fr; patricia.garnier@inrae.fr;
   david.houben@unilasalle.fr; marie-france.dignac@inrae.fr;
   cornelia.rumpel@inrae.fr
RI Dignac, Marie-France/GXH-9712-2022; Rumpel, Cornelia/A-2001-2015;
   Lebrun, Manhattan/GMW-7341-2022
OI Lebrun, Manhattan/0000-0002-8528-3040; Vedere,
   Charlotte/0000-0002-0508-3285
FU ANR PRIMA project CHANGEUP [ANR-21-PRIM-0005]; FUI project [BIOCHAR21];
   Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-21-PRIM-0005] Funding
   Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)
FX This work was supported by the ANR PRIMA project CHANGEUP
   [ANR-21-PRIM-0005] and the FUI project BIOCHAR21.
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NR 345
TC 23
Z9 25
U1 19
U2 136
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0012-8252
EI 1872-6828
J9 EARTH-SCI REV
JI Earth-Sci. Rev.
PD NOV
PY 2022
VL 234
AR 104214
DI 10.1016/j.earscirev.2022.104214
EA OCT 2022
PG 21
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA 6A4SI
UT WOS:000880646600002
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lee, K
   Nam, S
   Cho, YK
   Jeong, KY
   Byun, D
AF Lee, KyungJae
   Nam, SungHyun
   Cho, Yang-Ki
   Jeong, Kwang-Young
   Byun, Do-Seong
TI Determination of Long-Term (1993-2019) Sea Level Rise Trends Around the
   Korean Peninsula Using Ocean Tide-Corrected, Multi-Mission Satellite
   Altimetry Data
SO FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE Korean Peninsula; sea levels; satellite altimetry data; ocean tide
   models; sea level rise
ID VARIABILITY; SURFACE; YELLOW; MODEL; WIND
AB It is vital to improve estimations of long-term trends in global and regional sea level rise to help mitigate and adapt to climate change. Satellite altimetry data have been widely used for this purpose; however, data collected in regions with strong tidalmotions often suffer from significant aliasing effects unless they are sufficiently corrected using accurate ocean tide models.Long-term trends estimated from altimetry data are often also considerably affected by regional circulation changes, and by artificial effects arising from inconsistencies between different satellite missions. Here, we focused on two regions with high (>5 mm.yr(-1)) rates of long-term linear trend in sea level rise (LTSLR) around the Korean Peninsula (KP). We addressed the impacts of tidal correction and mission inconsistency in satellite altimetry data, and discussed the potential impacts of circulation changes on LTSLR. Because the LTSLR estimation is affected by the aliasing effects of altimetry data when the tidal motions are not corrected sufficiently, yet the correction depends on the performance of ocean tide models, we employed eight ocean tide models to correct altimetry data for comparison and validated the results against observations from 13 tide gauge (TG) stations around the KP. We also estimated LTSLR from 1993 to 2019 using annual mean sea level anomalies (SLAs) from two satellite (two-sat) and all 21 satellite (all-sat) missions, with corrections for ocean tides. The TPXO9 model showed the most reasonable spatial LTSLR rate pattern (similar to 3 mm.yr(-1)), with the smallest difference from TG observations. It performed best near the west coast where the tidal range was the largest and when using two-sat data, because of inconsistencies in all-sat altimetry data. In contrast, off the east coast, where the impact of tidal correction is negligible, the high (similar to 7 mm.yr(-1)) LTSLR rates were robust regardless of ocean tide models and altimetry missions, potentially driven by long-term changes in regional circulation. Our results highlight the importance of tidal correction and mission inconsistency for improving LTSLR estimations around the KP. They also have significant implications for determining regional sea level rise under changing circulation patterns, within and beyond the region.
C1 [Lee, KyungJae; Nam, SungHyun; Cho, Yang-Ki] Seoul Natl Univ, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Seoul, South Korea.
   [Nam, SungHyun; Cho, Yang-Ki] Seoul Natl Univ, Res Inst Oceanog, Seoul, South Korea.
   [Jeong, Kwang-Young; Byun, Do-Seong] Korea Hydrog & Oceanog Agcy, Ocean Res Div, Busan, South Korea.
C3 Seoul National University (SNU); Seoul National University (SNU)
RP Nam, S (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Sch Earth & Environm Sci, Seoul, South Korea.; Nam, S (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Res Inst Oceanog, Seoul, South Korea.
EM namsh@snu.ac.kr
RI Nam, SungHyun/M-8610-2019; Byun, Do-Seong/AAK-7132-2021; Cho,
   Yang-Ki/AAU-2549-2020
OI Lee, KyungJae/0000-0003-3812-9136; Nam, SungHyun/0000-0002-3338-0105
FU Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries (MOF), Republic of Korea [20160040];
   Korea Hydrographic and Oceanographic Agency (KHOA), MOF, through the
   "Analysis and Prediction of Sea Level Change in Response to Climate
   Change around the Korean Peninsula" program
FX This research formed a part of the project titled "Deep Water
   Circulation and Material Cycling in the East Sea (20160040)" funded by
   the Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries (MOF), Republic of Korea. This
   research was funded by the Korea Hydrographic and Oceanographic Agency
   (KHOA), MOF, through the "Analysis and Prediction of Sea Level Change in
   Response to Climate Change around the Korean Peninsula" program.
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NR 49
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 10
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2296-7745
J9 FRONT MAR SCI
JI Front. Mar. Sci.
PD FEB 24
PY 2022
VL 9
AR 810549
DI 10.3389/fmars.2022.810549
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA ZQ1XD
UT WOS:000766904200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

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   Mulder, J
AF Obia, Alfred
   Cornelissen, Gerard
   Martinsen, Vegard
   Smebye, Andreas Botnen
   Mulder, Jan
TI Conservation tillage and biochar improve soil water content and moderate
   soil temperature in a tropical Acrisol
SO SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Planting basins; Biochar; Soil water retention and temperature
ID PHYSICAL-PROPERTIES; THERMAL-PROPERTIES; MOISTURE-CONTENT; PRODUCTIVITY;
   GERMINATION; RETENTION; POROSITY; DENSITY; GROWTH; MAIZE
AB Projected climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa involves increased drought and elevated soil temperature. Conservation farming (CF), including minimum tillage, crop rotation and crop residue retention, is proposed as a climate smart soil management option to adapt to climate change through enhanced climate resilience. Here, we determine the effect on soil moisture and temperature of CF planting basins in a Zambian Acrisol. Construction of CF planting basins (40 cm x 15 cm, while 20 cm deep), using hand-hoes, is a commonly used minimum tillage practice among small holders in southern Africa, effectively requiring tillage of only 10 % of a field. The study included basins under regular CF and under CF with 4 t ha(-1) pigeon pea biochar (CF + BC). Effects are compared with those in an adjacent soil under conventional tillage, where the entire land surface is ploughed. Soil moisture and temperature sensors were installed in the root zone, 10-12 cm deep, for continuous monitoring during two growing seasons. Soil moisture decreased in the order CF + BC > CF > conventional farming. Due to rainwater harvesting in the basins, maximum soil water retention under CF + BC and CF was greater than under conventional farming ( + 59 % to +107 % and + 15 % to + 65 %, respectively). Soil drying after free drainage until permanent wilting point lasted longer under CF + BC (18.4-22.3 days) than under both CF and conventional farming (13.3-18.4 days and 14.9-17.8 days, respectively). In situ soil maximum temperature and diurnal temperature range in the growing season increased in the order CF + BC < CF < conventional farming due to decreases in soil moisture. However, additional laboratory tests, with soil-BC mixtures at field capacity, revealed that BC addition to soil, which caused a decrease in bulk density, also resulted in a significant decline in soil thermal conductivity (p < 0.001). Thus, we hypothesize that BC-enhanced soil moisture in basins helped to reduce soil temperature and its fluctuations, due to both increased heat capacity and decreased thermal conductivity. This study shows that CF in combination with BC in an Acrisol, through enhancing plant-available water and moderating soil temperature, is important for crop productivity and has potential as an element of climate smart agriculture.
C1 [Obia, Alfred; Cornelissen, Gerard; Smebye, Andreas Botnen] Norwegian Geotech Inst, Dept Environm Engn, POB 3930, NO-0806 Oslo, Norway.
   [Cornelissen, Gerard; Martinsen, Vegard; Mulder, Jan] Norwegian Univ Life Sci NMBU, Fac Environm Sci & Nat Resource Management MINA, POB 5003, NO-1432 As, Norway.
   [Obia, Alfred] Gulu Univ, Fac Agr & Environm, Dept Agron, POB 166, Gulu, Uganda.
C3 Norwegian Geotechnical Institute, NGI; Norwegian University of Life
   Sciences
RP Obia, A; Cornelissen, G (corresponding author), Norwegian Geotech Inst, Dept Environm Engn, POB 3930, NO-0806 Oslo, Norway.; Obia, A; Cornelissen, G (corresponding author), Gulu Univ, Fac Agr & Environm, Dept Agron, POB 166, Gulu, Uganda.
EM obialfrd@yahoo.com; Gerard.Cornelissen@ngi.no
RI Obia, Alfred/AAE-7257-2019; Martinsen, Vegard/H-9406-2014
OI Obia, Alfred/0000-0003-0960-7020; Martinsen, Vegard/0000-0002-7096-1806
FU Department for International Development (DFID), UK through Climate
   Smart Agriculture in Zambia (CSAZ) project; Norwegian Research Council
   under the project FriPro [217918]; Faculty of Environmental Sciences and
   Natural Resource Management, Norwegian University of Life Sciences
   (NMBU); Norwegian Geotechnical Institute (NGI); Research Council of
   Norway through FriPro; DFID through CSAZ
FX We are grateful to our funders, Department for International Development
   (DFID), UK through Climate Smart Agriculture in Zambia (CSAZ) project,
   Norwegian Research Council under the project FriPro number 217918 and
   Faculty of Environmental Sciences and Natural Resource Management,
   Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU) through a stipend awarded
   to Vegard Martinsen for funding our field research in Zambia. We are
   grateful to Norwegian Geotechnical Institute (NGI), The Research Council
   of Norway through FriPro and DFID through CSAZ for funding the two
   years' Postdoctoral fellowship of the first author. We thank Fatma
   Islekcerci of NGI for the support during the measurement of thermal
   conductivity in the laboratory.
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NR 45
TC 40
Z9 43
U1 7
U2 101
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29a, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0167-1987
EI 1879-3444
J9 SOIL TILL RES
JI Soil Tillage Res.
PD MAR
PY 2020
VL 197
AR 104521
DI 10.1016/j.still.2019.104521
PG 12
WC Soil Science
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA KM3EH
UT WOS:000514003800025
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chapman, A
   Darby, S
AF Chapman, Alexander
   Darby, Stephen
TI Evaluating sustainable adaptation strategies for vulnerable mega-deltas
   using system dynamics modelling: Rice agriculture in the Mekong Delta's
   An Giang Province, Vietnam
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Sediment; System dynamics; Rice; Mekong Delta
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE IMPACTS; RIVER DELTA; SEDIMENT DEPOSITION; CROPPING
   SYSTEMS; MANAGEMENT; LAND; MITIGATION
AB Challenging dynamics are unfolding in social-ecological systems around the globe as society attempts to mitigate and adapt to climate change while sustaining rapid local development. The IPCC's 5th assessment suggests these changing systems are susceptible to unforeseen and dangerous 'emergent risks'. An archetypal example is the Vietnamese Mekong Delta (VMD) where the river dyke network has been heightened and extended over the last decade with the dual objectives of (1) adapting the delta's 18 million inhabitants and their livelihoods to increasingly intense river-flooding, and (2) developing rice production through a shift from double to triple-cropping. Negative impacts have been associated with this shift, particularly in relation to its exclusion of fluvial sediment deposition from the floodplain. A deficit in our understanding of the dynamics of the rice-sediment system, which involve unintuitive delays, feedbacks, and tipping points, is addressed here, using a system dynamics (SD) approach to inform sustainable adaptation strategies. Specifically, we develop and test a new SD model which simulates the dynamics between the farmers' economic system and their rice agriculture operations, and uniquely, integrates the role of fluvial sediment deposition within their dyke compartment.
   We use the model to explore a range of alternative rice cultivation strategies. Our results suggest that the current dominant strategy (triple-cropping) is only optimal for wealthier groups within society and over the short-term (ca. 10 years post-implementation). The model suggests that the policy of opening sluice gates and leaving paddies fallow during high-flood years, in order to encourage natural sediment deposition and the nutrient replenishment it supplies, is both a more equitable and a more sustainable policy. But, even with this approach, diminished supplies of sediment-bound nutrients and the consequent need to compensate with artificial fertilisers will mean that smaller-scale farmers in the VMD are more vulnerable to accruing debt. (C) 2016 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
C1 [Chapman, Alexander; Darby, Stephen] Univ Southampton, Geog & Environm, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.
C3 University of Southampton
RP Chapman, A (corresponding author), Univ Southampton, Geog & Environm, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.
EM adc506@gmail.com
RI Darby, Stephen/J-5799-2012
OI Darby, Stephen/0000-0001-8778-4394
FU University of Southampton; UK Natural Environment Research Council
   (NERC) [NE/JO21970/1]; NERC [NE/J021970/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX The authors wish to extend their thanks to Professor P.I. Davidsen and
   the System Dynamics group at the University of Bergen for their support
   with the modelling process, and the University of Southampton for PhD
   funding. S.E.D's contribution to this paper was supported by award
   NE/JO21970/1 from the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).
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NR 84
TC 103
Z9 107
U1 4
U2 205
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD JUL 15
PY 2016
VL 559
BP 326
EP 338
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.02.162
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DK7WD
UT WOS:000375136600033
PM 27082648
OA hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Huang, CH
   Xie, LJ
   Chen, WZ
   Lin, Y
   Wu, YX
   Li, PH
   Chen, WR
   Yang, W
   Deng, JS
AF Huang, Chenhao
   Xie, Lijian
   Chen, Weizhen
   Lin, Yi
   Wu, Yixuan
   Li, Penghan
   Chen, Weirong
   Yang, Wu
   Deng, Jinsong
TI Remote-sensing extraction and carbon emission reduction benefit
   assessment for centralized photovoltaic power plants in Agrivoltaic
   systems
SO APPLIED ENERGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Centralized photovoltaic; Agrivoltaic system; Deep Learning; Carbon
   emissions reduction; Life Cycle Assessment; Sustainable Development
   Goals
ID GOOGLE-EARTH; U-NET; ENVIRONMENTAL-IMPACT; GAS EMISSION; ENERGY; SOLAR;
   TRENDS; SEGMENTATION; GENERATION; FRAMEWORK
AB The utilization of renewable energy is an essential way to address climate change and achieve "carbon neutrality". As one of the most promising strategies for energy development, photovoltaic (PV) power generation has gained significant attention. In order to scientifically estimate its ecological benefits and potential for carbon reduction, it is imperative to have an accurate and efficient understanding of the current spatial deployment status of such facilities. As a novel economic mode, agrivoltaic systems innovatively integrate solar power generation to agricultural activities. The corresponding systems can achieve the diversity of land use, resulting in the mitigation of the issue of poor land utilization (caused by traditional PV panels' large footprint), which demonstrates the comprehensive benefits of clean energy supply, food production, and adaptation to climate change. However, there is still a lack of a systematic methodology for accurately mapping large-scale centralized PV plants in agrivoltaic systems (CAPVs), while simultaneously assessing their carbon reduction benefits over their entire lifespan. In this case, a systematic methodological framework in Zhejiang Province, China has been established and applied in this study. Firstly, a sample database of CAPVs by visual interpretation and data enhancement against satellite images has been built. Secondly, the CAPVs has been mapped using Google Earth images and U-Net network. Finally, CAPVs' carbon emission reduction benefits have been estimated based on Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) and corresponding spatial distribution patterns have been analyzed. The findings from the remote-sensing mapping indicate that the total area of the obtained CAPVs has reached 57.40 km2, with the majority of these facilities situated in the eastern and northwestern regions of Zhejiang Province. The overall accuracy of the deep learning model has reaches 90.42%, with the Mean Intersection over Union reaching 76.96%. Based on results from the carbon emission and reduction assessment, the CAPVs in Zhejiang Province have the potential to generate a total annual carbon dioxide (CO2) output of 0.94 Mt./year over their lifespan with the accompanying carbon reduction benefit of 2.58 Mt./year, while, the CO2 emission payback period would be only 3.95 years. The implementation of this study could offer valuable methodological guidance and data references for researchers and policymakers involved in technical research and decision-making related to agrivoltaic systems. Moreover, this study contributes to the synergy of multiple Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that pertain to the renewal of energy structures, reduction of carbon emissions, and enhancement of food security.
C1 [Huang, Chenhao; Xie, Lijian; Chen, Weizhen; Wu, Yixuan; Li, Penghan; Chen, Weirong; Yang, Wu; Deng, Jinsong] Zhejiang Univ, Coll Environm & Resource Sci, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China.
   [Lin, Yi] Zhejiang Univ Technol, Coll Environm, Hangzhou 310014, Peoples R China.
   [Deng, Jinsong] Zhejiang Ecol Civilizat Acad, Huzhou 313300, Peoples R China.
C3 Zhejiang University; Zhejiang University of Technology
RP Deng, JS (corresponding author), Zhejiang Univ, Coll Environm & Resource Sci, Hangzhou 310058, Peoples R China.
EM jsong_deng@zju.edu.cn
RI Chen, Weirong/L-5212-2019; Yang, Wu/JPK-4460-2023
OI Huang, Chenhao/0000-0001-8544-9103; Yang, Wu/0000-0002-1682-3349
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [22376179]; Basic
   Investigation Program of the Ministry of Science and Technology of the
   People's Republic of China [2023FY100102]; Strategic Research and
   Consulting Program of the Chinese Academy of Engineering [2023-XY-23];
   Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [LY18G030006]; Research
   Topic of Zhejiang Provincial Development and Reform Commission
   [2022-37588]
FX This research was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (22376179) , the Basic Investigation Program of the Ministry of
   Science and Technology of the People's Republic of China (2023FY100102)
   , the Strategic Research and Consulting Program of the Chinese Academy
   of Engineering (2023-XY-23) , the Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang
   Province (LY18G030006) , and the Research Topic of Zhejiang Provincial
   Development and Reform Commission (2022-37588) .
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NR 118
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 47
U2 50
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0306-2619
EI 1872-9118
J9 APPL ENERG
JI Appl. Energy
PD SEP 15
PY 2024
VL 370
AR 123585
DI 10.1016/j.apenergy.2024.123585
EA JUN 2024
PG 17
WC Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Chemical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA UZ6W3
UT WOS:001251936100001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Chen, HJ
   Liu, L
   Zhang, ZY
   Liu, Y
   Tian, H
   Kang, ZW
   Wang, TX
   Zhang, XY
AF Chen Hongjin
   Liu Lin
   Zhang Zhengyong
   Liu Ya
   Tian Hao
   Kang Ziwei
   Wang Tongxia
   Zhang Xueying
TI Spatio-temporal correlation between human activity intensity and land
   surface temperature on the north slope of Tianshan Mountains
SO JOURNAL OF GEOGRAPHICAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE human activity intensity; surface temperature; nighttime light data;
   spatio-temporal correlation; north slope of Tianshan Mountains
ID DYNAMICS; DMSP/OLS; CHINA; URBANIZATION; VEGETATION
AB Research on the spatio-temporal correlation between the intensity of human activities and the temperature of earth surfaces is of great significance in many aspects, including fully understanding the causes and mechanisms of climate change, actively adapting to climate change, pursuing rational development, and protecting the ecological environment. Taking the north slope of Tianshan Mountains, located in the arid area of northwestern China and extremely sensitive to climate change, as the research area, this study retrieves the surface temperature of the mountain based on MODIS data, while characterizing the intensity of human activities thereby data on the night light, population distribution and land use. The evolution characteristics of human activity intensity and surface temperature in the study area from 2000 to 2018 were analyzed, and the spatio-temporal correlation between them was further explored. It is found that: (1) The average human activity intensity (0.11) in the research area has kept relatively low since this century, and the overall trend has been slowly rising in a stepwise manner (0.0024 center dot a(-1)); in addition, the increase in human activity intensity has lagged behind that in construction land and population by 1-2 years. (2) The annual average surface temperature in the area is 7.18 degrees C with a pronounced growth. The rate of change (0.02 degrees C center dot a(-1)) is about 2.33 times that of the world. The striking boost in spring (0.068 degrees C center dot a(-1)) contributes the most to the overall warming trend. Spatially, the surface temperature is low in the south and high in the north, due to the prominent influence of the underlying surface characteristics, such as elevation and vegetation coverage. (3) The intensity of human activity and the surface temperature are remarkably positively correlated in the human activity areas there, showing a strong distribution in the east section and a weak one in the west section. The expression of its spatial differentiation and correlation is comprehensively affected by such factors as scopes of human activities, manifestations, and land-use changes. Vegetation-related human interventions, such as agriculture and forestry planting, urban greening, and afforestation, can effectively reduce the surface warming caused by human activities. This study not only puts forward new ideas to finely portray the intensity of human activities but also offers a scientific reference for regional human-land coordination and overall development.
C1 [Chen Hongjin; Liu Lin; Zhang Zhengyong; Liu Ya; Tian Hao; Kang Ziwei; Wang Tongxia; Zhang Xueying] Shihezi Univ, Sch Sci, Shihezi 832000, Xinjiang, Peoples R China.
   [Chen Hongjin; Liu Lin; Zhang Zhengyong; Liu Ya; Tian Hao; Kang Ziwei; Wang Tongxia; Zhang Xueying] Key Lab Oasis Town & Mt Basin Syst Ecol Xinjiang, Shihezi 832003, Xinjiang, Peoples R China.
C3 Shihezi University
RP Liu, L (corresponding author), Shihezi Univ, Sch Sci, Shihezi 832000, Xinjiang, Peoples R China.; Liu, L (corresponding author), Key Lab Oasis Town & Mt Basin Syst Ecol Xinjiang, Shihezi 832003, Xinjiang, Peoples R China.
EM ZLYZXLX@163.com; liulin779@163.com
RI Chen, Hongjin/LQK-9254-2024; Zhang, Xueying/IWD-8927-2023; Wang,
   Tongxia/HGC-5120-2022; tian, hao/JAO-1683-2023
OI tian, hao/0000-0001-9318-5013
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [41461086, 41761108]
FX National Natural Science Foundation of China, No.41461086, No.41761108
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NR 63
TC 10
Z9 13
U1 6
U2 74
PU SCIENCE PRESS
PI BEIJING
PA 16 DONGHUANGCHENGGEN NORTH ST, BEIJING 100717, PEOPLES R CHINA
SN 1009-637X
EI 1861-9568
J9 J GEOGR SCI
JI J. Geogr. Sci.
PD OCT
PY 2022
VL 32
IS 10
BP 1935
EP 1955
DI 10.1007/s11442-022-2030-5
PG 21
WC Geography, Physical
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Physical Geography
GA 5B5GU
UT WOS:000863598800004
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Duboscq-Carra, VG
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AF Duboscq-Carra, V. G.
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TI Differentiation in phenology among and within natural populations of a
   South American <i>Nothofagus</i> revealed by a two-year evaluation in a
   common garden trial
SO FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Bud burst; Senescence; Growing degree days; Chilling hours; Nothofagus
   alpina
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; BUD-BURST; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; LOCAL ADAPTATION;
   EVOLUTIONARY RESPONSES; LEAF SENESCENCE; FAGUS-SYLVATICA; SESSILE OAK;
   TEMPERATE; FOREST
AB Phenological traits are crucial for understanding adaptation to climate change due to their genetic control and association with abiotic factors. However, few data on phenology patterns are available for South American Nothofagus species, in particular for Nothofagus alpina, a key species of the temperate forests of Patagonia. Therefore, our aim was to analyze the variation among and within natural populations of N. alpina in two phenological traits (bud burst and foliar senescence), in growing season length and in relative growth height. We registered phenology in 65 open pollinated families of eight Argentinean natural populations installed in a common garden trial. Apical buds and foliar senescence were observed every three days in 6-year-old plants and again three years later in the same plants (N = 373). Day of the year until bud burst (DOY) and until the beginning (DOY10) and the end (DOY90) of foliar senescence were measured. Height was measured twice in a year in order to calculate the annual growth in both seasons. Growing degree days (GDD) and chilling hours (CH) until bud burst were also calculated, with two possible basal temperatures (5 degrees C and 7 degrees C) to evaluate their role in DOY. Significant differences among populations and years in DOY and growing season length were found using a linear mixed model (LMM), with the family factor explaining around 30% and 12% of the total variance respectively. The LMM for foliar senescence (DOY10 and DOY90) and the relative growth height (RGH) showed significant differences between years but not among populations. The family factor was significant for foliar senescence, although it only explained a small part of the total variance (DOY10: 4%; DOY90: 2%) and was not significant for relative growth height. A tight relationship between GDD and CHwith DOY was found, and LMM showed significant differences among populations and years for both variables. The correlation between the altitude of natural populations and the mean DOY and GDD was high and positive. Our results reveal (i) the genetic control of bud burst and foliar senescence, and phenotypic plasticity of all analyzed traits, (ii) that GDD and CH are implicated in the DOY, and (iii) that altitude is probably conditioning thermal requirement of bud burst. This information suggests good perspectives to face the climate change scenario and highlight the importance of selecting appropriate populations and families for domestication and breeding of N. alpina at particular sites.
C1 [Duboscq-Carra, V. G.; Arias-Rios, J. A.; El Mujtar, V. A.; Marchelli, P.; Pastorino, M. J.] INTA CONICET, Inst Invest Forestales & Agr Bariloche IFAB, Grp Genet Forestal, Bote Modesta Victoria 4450, RA-8400 San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina.
C3 Instituto Nacional de Tecnologia Agropecuaria (INTA)
RP Duboscq-Carra, VG; Arias-Rios, JA (corresponding author), INTA CONICET, Inst Invest Forestales & Agr Bariloche IFAB, Grp Genet Forestal, Bote Modesta Victoria 4450, RA-8400 San Carlos De Bariloche, Rio Negro, Argentina.
EM virginiaduboscq@gmail.com; arias.jorge@inta.gob.ar
RI ElMujtar, Veronica/KIA-6674-2024; Pastorino, Mario/AAI-9725-2020;
   Marchelli, Paula/T-3533-2019
OI arias rios, jorge andres/0000-0003-2101-5749; Marchelli,
   Paula/0000-0002-6949-0656; Pastorino, Mario Juan/0000-0003-0120-7727
FU project "Variacion genetica de poblaciones naturales argentinas de Rauli
   (Nothofagus nervosa) y Roble Pellin (Nothofagus obliqua) en caracteres
   adaptativos tempranos relevantes para domesticacion" PIP 2008
   [112-200801-02867 CONICET]; project "Subprograma Nothofagus" [PROMEF -
   BIRF 7520 AR]; project "Mejoramiento Genetic de Especies Forestales
   Nativas de Alto Valor" [PNFOR 110463 INTA]; project "Restauracion
   ecosistemica y domesticacion de especies forestales nativas patagonicas
   con gran potencialidad productiva: bases geneticas de la adaptacion a
   estres hidrico y termico" [PICT 2016 1116 ANPCyT]
FX This work was supported by the projects "Variacion genetica de
   poblaciones naturales argentinas de Rauli (Nothofagus nervosa) y Roble
   Pellin (Nothofagus obliqua) en caracteres adaptativos tempranos
   relevantes para domesticacion" PIP 2008 No 112-200801-02867 CONICET;
   "Subprograma Nothofagus" PROMEF - BIRF 7520 AR; "Mejoramiento Genetic de
   Especies Forestales Nativas de Alto Valor" PNFOR 110463 INTA and
   "Restauracion ecosistemica y domesticacion de especies forestales
   nativas patagonicas con gran potencialidad productiva: bases geneticas
   de la adaptacion a estres hidrico y termico" PICT 2016 1116 ANPCyT.
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NR 58
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 20
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29a, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-1127
EI 1872-7042
J9 FOREST ECOL MANAG
JI For. Ecol. Manage.
PD MAR 15
PY 2020
VL 460
AR 117858
DI 10.1016/j.foreco.2019.117858
PG 10
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA KT2VW
UT WOS:000518874700047
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mathison, C
   Challinor, AJ
   Deva, C
   Falloon, P
   Garrigues, S
   Moulin, S
   Williams, K
   Wiltshire, A
AF Mathison, Camilla
   Challinor, Andrew J.
   Deva, Chetan
   Falloon, Pete
   Garrigues, Sebastien
   Moulin, Sophie
   Williams, Karina
   Wiltshire, Andy
TI Implementation of sequential cropping into JULESvn5.2 land-surface model
SO GEOSCIENTIFIC MODEL DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
ID ENVIRONMENT SIMULATOR JULES; INDO-GANGETIC PLAINS; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   WATER-RESOURCES; WHEAT; VEGETATION; SOIL; PROJECTIONS; IMPACTS; CARBON
AB Land-surface models (LSMs) typically simulate a single crop per year in a field or location. However, actual cropping systems are characterized by a succession of distinct crop cycles that are sometimes interspersed with long periods of bare soil. Sequential cropping (also known as multiple or double cropping) is particularly common in tropical regions, where the crop seasons are largely dictated by the main wet season. In this paper, we implement sequential cropping in a branch of the Joint UK Land Environment Simulator (JULES) and demonstrate its use at sites in France and India. We simulate all the crops grown within a year in a field or location in a seamless way to understand how sequential cropping influences the surface fluxes of a landsurface model. We evaluate JULES with sequential cropping in Avignon, France, providing over 15 years of continuous flux observations (a point simulation). We apply JULES with sequential cropping to simulate the rice-wheat rotation in a regional 25 km resolution gridded simulation for the northern Indian states of Uttar Pradesh and Bihar and four single-gridbox simulations across these states, where each simulation is a 25 km grid box. The inclusion of a secondary crop in JULES using the sequential cropping method presented does not change the crop growth or development of the primary crop. During the secondary crop growing period, the carbon and energy fluxes for Avignon and India are modified; they are largely unchanged for the primary crop growing period. For India, the inclusion of a secondary crop using this se- quential cropping method affects the available soil moisture in the top 1.0 m throughout the year, with larger fluctuations in sequential crops compared with single-crop simulations even outside the secondary crop growing period. JULES simulates sequential cropping in Avignon, the four India locations and the regional run, representing both crops within one growing season in each of the crop rotations presented. This development is a step forward in the ability of JULES to simulate crops in tropical regions where this cropping system is already prevalent. It also provides the opportunity to assess the potential for other regions to implement sequential cropping as an adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Mathison, Camilla; Falloon, Pete; Williams, Karina; Wiltshire, Andy] Met Off Hadley Ctr, FitzRoy Rd, Exeter, Devon, England.
   [Mathison, Camilla; Challinor, Andrew J.; Deva, Chetan] Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Inst Climate & Atmospher Sci, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
   [Garrigues, Sebastien] European Ctr Medium Range Weather Forecasts, Reading, Berks, England.
   [Garrigues, Sebastien; Moulin, Sophie] Avignon Univ, INRAE, Environm Mediterraneen & Modelisat AgroHydrosyst, 228 Route Aerodrome Domaine St Paul Site Agropar, Avignon, France.
   [Williams, Karina; Wiltshire, Andy] Univ Exeter, Global Syst Inst, Laver Bldg,North Pk Rd, Exeter, Devon, England.
C3 Met Office - UK; Hadley Centre; University of Leeds; European Centre for
   Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF); Avignon Universite; INRAE;
   University of Exeter
RP Mathison, C (corresponding author), Met Off Hadley Ctr, FitzRoy Rd, Exeter, Devon, England.; Mathison, C (corresponding author), Univ Leeds, Sch Earth & Environm, Inst Climate & Atmospher Sci, Leeds, W Yorkshire, England.
EM camilla.mathison@metoffice.gov.uk
RI Challinor, Andrew/AAK-3023-2020; garrigues, sebastien/GZM-5933-2022;
   Mathison, Camilla/ABD-5210-2020; Wiltshire, Andy/C-2848-2008
OI Williams, Karina/0000-0002-1185-535X; Mathison,
   Camilla/0000-0002-6269-4605; Falloon, Peter/0000-0001-7567-8885;
   Garrigues, Sebastien/0009-0005-7668-5071
FU European Union Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 [603864]; Met
   Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme - BEIS; Defra
FX The research leading to these results has received funding from the
   European Union Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 under grant
   agreement no. 603864. Camilla Mathison, Pete Falloon, Andy Wiltshire and
   Karina Williams were supported by the Met Office Hadley Centre Climate
   Programme funded by BEIS and Defra.
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NR 77
TC 2
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 9
PU COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
PI GOTTINGEN
PA BAHNHOFSALLEE 1E, GOTTINGEN, 37081, GERMANY
SN 1991-959X
EI 1991-9603
J9 GEOSCI MODEL DEV
JI Geosci. Model Dev.
PD JAN 25
PY 2021
VL 14
IS 1
BP 437
EP 471
DI 10.5194/gmd-14-437-2021
PG 35
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology
GA QA2II
UT WOS:000613271600003
OA Green Published, Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhou, SD
   Zhou, WK
   Lin, GH
   Chen, J
   Jiang, T
   Li, M
AF Zhou, Shudong
   Zhou, Wenkui
   Lin, Guanghua
   Chen, Jing
   Jiang, Tong
   Li, Man
TI Adapting to climate change: scenario analysis of grain production in
   China
SO CHINA AGRICULTURAL ECONOMIC REVIEW
LA English
DT Article
DE China; Scenario analysis; CAPA model; Climate change and adaptation;
   Grain production
ID AGRICULTURE; GROWTH; IMPACT; YIELD; RICE
AB Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to examine the impacts of future climate change and the corresponding adaptation activities on grain production and its regional distribution in China.
   Design/methodology/approach - This paper applied the Chinese Agricultural Policy Analysis model, in combination with the findings from agronomic literature with highly detailed agricultural census data, to conduct equilibrium analysis under alternative impact (seasonal drought and climate warming) scenarios and adaptation scenarios (promoting water-saving irrigation, introducing new varieties, and the integrated) associated with climate change.
   Findings - Simulation results indicate that climate change-induced seasonal drought and the resulting yield reduction will incur substantial losses to China's grain production (by similar to 8 percent at a national scale). The application of water saving techniques can be an effective solution to seasonal drought. Introducing new varieties will increase the combination of promoting water-saving irrigation and new variety adoption will increase combination of promoting water-saving irrigation and new variety adoption constitute an effective approach to offsetting the negative effects of climate change on grain production.
   Research limitations/implications - Simulation results indicate that climate change-induced seasonal drought and the resulting sown area reduction will incur substantial losses to China's grain production by approximately 8 percent, despite farmers' adaptation activities of switching from water use-intensive crops to drought-tolerant crops to mitigate this negative effect. The application of water saving techniques is an effective solution to seasonal drought; it can lead to a nationwide increase in the sown area by 3.48 percent and in the grain production by 4.15 percent. Introducing new varieties will increase grain outputs and change the spatial distribution of crop production across the country. The combination of promoting water-saving irrigation and new variety adoption will increase the national grain production by 19.6 percent, and thus constitute an effective approach to offsetting the negative effects of climate change on grain production.
   Originality/value - Results from this study provide practical implications formulate strategies in response to climate change. Central government should reinforce the policies such as new varieties promotion and improve the subsidy method to guide the introduction of new varieties.
C1 [Zhou, Shudong; Zhou, Wenkui; Lin, Guanghua] Nanjing Agr Univ, Coll Econ & Management, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Zhou, Shudong] Nanjing Agr Univ, China Ctr Food Secur Studies, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Jing; Jiang, Tong] Nanjing Univ Informat Sci & Technol, Sch Geog & Remote Sensing, Collaborat Innovat Ctr Forecast & Evaluat Meteoro, Nanjing, Jiangsu, Peoples R China.
   [Jiang, Tong] China Meteorol Adm, Natl Climate Ctr, Beijing, Peoples R China.
   [Li, Man] Int Food Policy Res Inst, Environm & Prod Technol Div, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
C3 Nanjing Agricultural University; Nanjing Agricultural University;
   Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology; China
   Meteorological Administration; CGIAR; International Food Policy Research
   Institute (IFPRI)
RP Li, M (corresponding author), Int Food Policy Res Inst, Environm & Prod Technol Div, Washington, DC 20036 USA.
EM Man.Li@cgiar.org
FU Key Project of National Philosophy and Social Science Foundation of
   China [13ZD160]; Soft science project of Ministry of Agriculture of
   China [L201015]; Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
   of China [XNC2012001]; CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change,
   Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS)
FX This study was conducted under the Key Project of National Philosophy
   and Social Science Foundation of China (13&ZD160), China Agricultural
   Research System (CARS-13), the Soft science project of Ministry of
   Agriculture of China (L201015), National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (71573135), the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central
   Universities of China (XNC2012001), the Priority Academic Program
   Development of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions (PAPD), and China
   Center for Food Security Studies, Nanjing Agricultural University. Li
   received separate funds from the CGIAR Research Program on Climate
   Change, Agriculture and Food Security (CCAFS). The authors gratefully
   acknowledge the National Climate Center for providing data set of
   Chinese Regional Climate Change Projection and the National
   Meteorological Information Center of China for valuable historical
   observations of temperature and precipitation.
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NR 47
TC 11
Z9 11
U1 4
U2 71
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-137X
EI 1756-1388
J9 CHINA AGR ECON REV
JI China Agric. Econ. Rev.
PY 2017
VL 9
IS 4
BP 643
EP 659
DI 10.1108/CAER-10-2016-0173
PG 17
WC Agricultural Economics & Policy; Economics
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Business & Economics
GA FN5VD
UT WOS:000416075800010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Vincent, D
AF Vincent, David
GP IEEE
TI Devising and implementing incentives for low carbon technology
   innovation and commercialisation - a perspective drawn from Carbon Trust
   experience
SO 2006 IEEE EIC Climate Change Conference, Vols 1 and 2
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT IEEE EIC Climate Change Conference
CY MAY 09-12, 2006
CL Ottawa, CANADA
SP IEEE
AB This paper takes as a given the need for accelerated progress towards an energy efficient, low carbon economy in response to increasingly powerful climate change and energy supply drivers which are beginning to have a global impact. It argues that markets have huge power to transform themselves but their "will" to do so is heavily conditioned by the nature, magnitude and duration of the value which is perceived, won or lost by those involved in and impacted by that transformation.
   For energy efficiency and low carbon technologies, there is a gap between the perception of their value by individuals and by society. So far as mitigating (and adapting to) climate change is concerned, there is a global imperative to achieve the societal good of a low carbon economy. The more time we spend not making the transition, the harder it will be for future generations and the more disruptive will be the climate change induced conditions they will face.
   Many Governments have recognised this imperative and have devised a range of regulatory, fiscal and market interventions to tackle and mitigate climate change. Ever since the Rio Summit in 1992, the UK Government has been among the leading protagonists for action. Its first climate change programme, launched in November 2000, featured new policies and measures designed to achieve reductions in our carbon dioxide emissions. A novel, ground-breaking element in the UK's climate change programme is the Carbon Trust - an independent, business led, Government backed company set up in March 2001.
   The Carbon Trust's objective is "to accelerate the transition to a low carbon economy by helping organisations reduce their carbon emissions and develop commercial low carbon technologies".
   This paper discusses low carbon technology innovation and commercialisation. It describes the Carbon Trust's roles: (a) to reduce carbon emissions now, using today's know how, (b) to help develop and commercialise new and emerging energy efficiency and low carbon technologies, and (c) to understand the impacts of climate change and help inform the development of Governmental and corporate policies and measures to accelerate the transition to a low carbon economy. It also discusses the nature of innovation and commercialisation; how the Carbon Trust is working to understand it better; and how we have gone about applying our understanding in practice.
CR Grubb M., 2004, KEIO J EC, V41, P103
   *IPCC, 3 ASS REP 2001
NR 2
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 6
PU IEEE
PI NEW YORK
PA 345 E 47TH ST, NEW YORK, NY 10017 USA
BN 978-1-4244-0217-5
PY 2006
BP 534
EP 540
PG 7
WC Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BGI75
UT WOS:000247356600070
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ziervogel, G
   Taylor, A
AF Ziervogel, Gina
   Taylor, Anna
TI A co-produced national climate change risk and vulnerability assessment
   framework for South Africa
SO FRONTIERS IN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE climate risk and vulnerability assessments; South Africa; vulnerability
   assessment framework; climate change adaptation; co-production;
   integrated risk and vulnerability assessments
ID ADAPTATION; PATHWAYS
AB IntroductionThere are mounting demands to undertake climate risk and vulnerability (CRV) assessments for policy, planning, funding, insurance, and compliance reasons. In Africa, given the adaptation imperative, this is particularly important. Increasingly, it has become clear that sub-national assessments are needed to inform adaptation practice. However, there has been relatively little guidance on how to undertake these more local assessments and aggregate them making it difficult for national governments to know the extent and variability of climate vulnerability and risk across the country.MethodsIn South Africa, the national government, led by the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE), undertook to establish a common framework to guide the development and review of CRV assessments. This paper presents the framework that was co-developed through a series of engagements with stakeholders active in implementing and supporting CRV assessments.ResultsThe framework is intended to provide guidance on what to consider when undertaking CRV assessments within diverse South African contexts in order to enable alignment, comparison, and aggregation between them and work towards an effective climate adaptation response across scales. Rather than standardizing a methodology, the framework promotes the use of a standard set of concepts as the basis for each assessment and profiles a diversity of methods, tools and data sources for applying the concepts in a contextually sensitive way. This provides a flexible yet structured sequence of three interlinked steps in a risk and vulnerability assessment process, namely: (1) Planning, (2) Scoping and (3) Assessing. The framework guides users through the choice and application of three assessment depths, depending on decision-context, resourcing and extent of pre-existing data and information. It encourages the integration of participatory and indicator-based methods through an impact chain approach, profiling more than 30 freely available tools and resources. This process builds a strong evidence base and a deepening set of engagements and shared understanding between relevant stakeholders, upon which to act.DiscussionThis South African process can provide insight and support for actors driving the climate agenda in other countries looking to develop comparable assessments as the basis to drive equitable and transformative climate action and learning.
C1 [Ziervogel, Gina] Univ Cape Town, Dept Environm & Geog Sci, Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Ziervogel, Gina; Taylor, Anna] Univ Cape Town, African Climate & Dev Initiat, Cape Town, South Africa.
C3 University of Cape Town; University of Cape Town
RP Ziervogel, G (corresponding author), Univ Cape Town, Dept Environm & Geog Sci, Cape Town, South Africa.; Ziervogel, G (corresponding author), Univ Cape Town, African Climate & Dev Initiat, Cape Town, South Africa.
EM gina.ziervogel@uct.ac.za
RI Taylor, Anna/GYU-1386-2022; Ziervogel, Gina/AAG-2945-2019
OI Taylor, Anna/0000-0001-6760-6080; Ziervogel, Gina/0000-0003-4219-6809
FU The project that this paper refers to was commissioned by the South
   African National Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment
   (DFFE), in collaboration with the Deutsche Gesellschaft fr
   Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf o; Environment (DFFE)
   - International Climate Initiative (IKI); Climate Systems Analysis Group
   (CSAG) at University of Cape Town
FX The project that this paper refers to was commissioned by the South
   African National Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment
   (DFFE), in collaboration with the Deutsche Gesellschaft fuer
   Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf of the Federal
   Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety
   (BMU), and funded by the International Climate Initiative (IKI). The
   project was undertaken by a team from the Climate Systems Analysis Group
   (CSAG) at University of Cape Town. Two of the team have written this
   paper.r The project that this paper refers to was commissioned by the
   South African National Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the
   Environment (DFFE), in collaboration with the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur
   Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf of the Federal
   Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety
   (BMU), and funded by the International Climate Initiative (IKI). The
   project was undertaken by a team from the Climate Systems Analysis Group
   (CSAG) at University of Cape Town. Two of the team have written this
   paper.
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NR 46
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 5
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9553
J9 FRONT CLIM
JI Front. Clim.
PD OCT 23
PY 2023
VL 5
AR 1197167
DI 10.3389/fclim.2023.1197167
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA X1WH4
UT WOS:001096418900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Neset, TS
   Andersson, L
   Uhrqvist, O
   Navarra, C
AF Neset, Tina-Simone
   Andersson, Lotta
   Uhrqvist, Ola
   Navarra, Carlo
TI Serious Gaming for Climate Adaptation-Assessing the Potential and
   Challenges of a Digital Serious Game for Urban Climate Adaptation
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE serious gaming; computer-based; climate adaptation; Agenda 2030;
   Education for Sustainable Development
ID SIMULATION; EDUCATION; PLAY; FUTURE; DESIGN; FLOW
AB Serious gaming has gained increasing prominence in climate change communication, and provides opportunity to engage new audiences and new platforms for knowledge co-creation and dialogues. This paper presents the design and evaluation of a serious game on climate adaptation, primarily targeted towards high school students, practitioners and politicians. The game aims to provide an experience of the impact of climate adaptation measures, and illustrates links with selected Agenda 2030 goals, which the player has to consider, while limiting impacts of hazardous climate events. The game design builds on the key goals in Education for Sustainable Development combining comprehensive views, action competence, learner engagement and pluralism. This study draws on game sessions and surveys with high school students in Sweden, and aims to assess to what extent different aspects of the game can support an increased understanding of the needs and benefits of adaptation actions. The results of this study indicate that the game can engage players to reflect upon challenges related to climate adaptation decision making, but also point towards the challenge of including a high degree of complexity which can make it difficult to grasp consequences of individual measures, as well as to link these to the natural variability of the occurrence of extreme climatic events.
C1 [Neset, Tina-Simone; Navarra, Carlo] Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
   [Andersson, Lotta] Swedish Meteorol & Hydrol Inst, S-60176 Norrkoping, Sweden.
   [Uhrqvist, Ola] Linkoping Univ, Dept Behav Sci & Learning, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
C3 Linkoping University; Swedish Meteorological & Hydrological Institute;
   Linkoping University
RP Neset, TS (corresponding author), Linkoping Univ, Ctr Climate Sci & Policy Res, Dept Themat Studies Environm Change, S-58183 Linkoping, Sweden.
EM tina.neset@liu.se; lotta.andersson@smhi.se; ola.uhrqvist@liu.se;
   carlo.navarra@liu.se
RI Navarra, Carlo/JJC-1654-2023; Uhrqvist, Ola/ABG-8360-2020
OI Navarra, Carlo/0000-0001-9892-8875; Neset,
   Tina-Simone/0000-0003-1151-9943
FU Swedish National Knowledge Centre for Climate Change Adaptation, based
   at SMHI
FX This research was funded by the Swedish National Knowledge Centre for
   Climate Change Adaptation, based at SMHI.
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NR 52
TC 34
Z9 33
U1 3
U2 55
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR 1
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 5
AR 1789
DI 10.3390/su12051789
PG 18
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KY3KU
UT WOS:000522470900090
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Tangney, P
AF Tangney, Peter
BA Tangney, P
BF Tangney, P
TI Queensland, Australia and the UK Comparing the pursuit of climate
   adaptation in liberal democracies
SO CLIMATE ADAPTATION POLICY AND EVIDENCE: UNDERSTANDING THE TENSIONS
   BETWEEN POLITICS AND EXPERTISE IN PUBLIC POLICY
SE Science in Society Series
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID RISK-MANAGEMENT; CHANGE POLICY; RESILIENCE; BRISBANE; FUTURE
C1 [Tangney, Peter] Flinders Univ S Australia, Sci Policy & Commun, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
C3 Flinders University South Australia
RP Tangney, P (corresponding author), Flinders Univ S Australia, Sci Policy & Commun, Adelaide, SA, Australia.
RI /CAE-0280-2022
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NR 145
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-315-26925-2; 978-1-138-28481-4
J9 SCI SOC SER
PY 2017
BP 56
EP 97
PG 42
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies; Public
   Administration
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Public Administration
GA BL0SS
UT WOS:000446568400004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hangartner, S
   Lasne, C
   Sgrò, CM
   Connallon, T
   Monro, K
AF Hangartner, Sandra
   Lasne, Clementine
   Sgro, Carla M.
   Connallon, Tim
   Monro, Keyne
TI Genetic covariances promote climatic adaptation in Australian
   <i>Drosophila</i>
SO EVOLUTION
LA English
DT Article
DE B matrix; G matrix; local adaptation; sexual dimorphism; selection
ID GEOGRAPHIC-VARIATION; SEXUAL SELECTION; G-MATRIX; CROSS-SEX; EVOLUTION;
   CONSTRAINTS; POPULATIONS; FITNESS; MELANOGASTER; STABILITY
AB Evolutionary potential for adaptation hinges upon the orientation of genetic variation for traits under selection, captured by the additive genetic variance-covariance matrix (G), as well as the evolutionary stability of G. Yet studies that assess both the stability of G and its alignment with selection are extraordinarily rare. We evaluated the stability of G in three Drosophila melanogaster populations that have adapted to local climatic conditions along a latitudinal cline. We estimated population- and sex-specific G matrices for wing size and three climatic stress-resistance traits that diverge adaptively along the cline. To determine how G affects evolutionary potential within these populations, we used simulations to quantify how well G aligns with the direction of trait divergence along the cline (as a proxy for the direction of local selection) and how genetic covariances between traits and sexes influence this alignment. We found that G was stable across the cline, showing no significant divergence overall, or in sex-specific subcomponents, among populations. G also aligned well with the direction of clinal divergence, with genetic covariances strongly elevating evolutionary potential for adaptation to climatic extremes. These results suggest that genetic covariances between both traits and sexes should significantly boost evolutionary responses to environmental change.
C1 [Hangartner, Sandra; Lasne, Clementine; Sgro, Carla M.; Connallon, Tim; Monro, Keyne] Monash Univ, Sch Biol Sci, Bldg 18, Melbourne, Vic 3800, Australia.
   [Monro, Keyne] Monash Univ, Ctr Geometr Biol, Melbourne, Vic 3800, Australia.
C3 Monash University; Monash University
RP Hangartner, S (corresponding author), Monash Univ, Sch Biol Sci, Bldg 18, Melbourne, Vic 3800, Australia.
EM Sandra.hangartner@monash.edu
RI Sgro, Carla/G-5166-2010; Lasne, Clementine/W-1296-2019; Monro,
   Keyne/J-7418-2019; Connallon, Tim/B-6726-2016
OI Lasne, Clementine/0000-0002-1197-8616
FU Australian Research Council
FX The authors thank Florencia Camus, Fiona Cockerell, Lindsey Heffernan,
   Shane Smith and Akane Uesugi for help in the laboratory, Michael
   Morrissey for comments on analyses, and two anonymous reviewers for
   comments on a previous version of the manuscript. Funding was provided
   by the Australian Research Council through Discovery grants to T. C., C.
   M. S., and K. M. The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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NR 80
TC 16
Z9 18
U1 0
U2 18
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0014-3820
EI 1558-5646
J9 EVOLUTION
JI Evolution
PD FEB
PY 2020
VL 74
IS 2
BP 326
EP 337
DI 10.1111/evo.13831
EA SEP 2019
PG 12
WC Ecology; Evolutionary Biology; Genetics & Heredity
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Evolutionary Biology; Genetics &
   Heredity
GA KK6CZ
UT WOS:000486849200001
PM 31432496
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ryeland, J
   Weston, MA
   Symonds, MRE
AF Ryeland, Julia
   Weston, Michael A.
   Symonds, Matthew R. E.
TI Bill size mediates behavioural thermoregulation in birds
SO FUNCTIONAL ECOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Allen's rule; back rest; bill size; birds; climate adaptation;
   thermoregulation
ID GEOGRAPHICAL VARIATION; TRADE-OFF; HEAT-LOSS; TEMPERATURE; VIGILANCE;
   SHOREBIRDS; MORPHOLOGY; POSTURES; REVEALS; SLEEP
AB 1. Bird bills have been the subject of classic evolutionary studies that demonstrate how morphological adaptations are driven by foraging ecology. As significant areas of heat loss, bills are also under selection with respect to thermoregulation, yet the ecological consequences of this function have been largely ignored until recently. 2. Given the role of bills in thermoregulation is important, we predict that birds should behave to minimise heat loss through their bills at lower ambient temperatures by attempting to insulate their bill in their plumage. 3. Our second prediction is that this thermoregulatory behaviour should be utilised more by species with relatively larger bills, because they will be more prone to heat loss. 4. We demonstrate both these predictions to be correct using field observations and a comparative analysis of nine shorebird species. First, the placement of the bill within the back plumage while roosting (back rest' behaviour), which insulates the bill, becomes more frequent at cooler temperatures. Second, species with large bills relative to their body size do indeed use back rest behaviour more frequently across a range of temperatures. 5. Our findings show that behavioural thermoregulation can be mediated by bill size, and that bill morphology is not only relevant to foraging ecology but also influences behavioural adaptations to climate.
C1 [Ryeland, Julia; Weston, Michael A.; Symonds, Matthew R. E.] Deakin Univ, Ctr Integrat Ecol, Sch Life & Environm Sci, Burwood, Vic, Australia.
C3 Deakin University
RP Symonds, MRE (corresponding author), Deakin Univ, Ctr Integrat Ecol, Sch Life & Environm Sci, Burwood, Vic, Australia.
EM matthew.symonds@deakin.edu.au
RI Weston, Michael/IVH-3564-2023; Symonds, Matthew/I-6020-2018
OI Symonds, Matthew/0000-0002-9785-6045; Weston,
   Michael/0000-0002-8717-0410; Ryeland, Julia/0000-0001-7983-9367
FU Deakin University
FX We thank Chris Lurundi and Kevin Gillet (Melbourne Water), Peter Dann
   (Phillip Island Nature Parks), and Bernie McCarrick, John Argote,
   Russell Brooks, Mark Cullen and Alex Tomsic (Parks Victoria, Point Cook
   Coastal Park) for granting us access to field sites and facilitating
   site visits and roosting bird location. John Endler, Naomi Langmore,
   Devi-Stuart Fox and Glenn Tattersall provided helpful feedback on
   drafts. Susie Cunningham, plus an anonymous reviewer and the associate
   editor provided extremely helpful suggestions and insights into our data
   that we previously had not considered. We also thank Dale Nimmo for
   statistical help, and Laura Tan and Daniel Lees for field assistance.
   Field work was conducted under Deakin University (Animal Ethics)
   Committee Approval B08-2013, Department of Sustainability and
   Environment Research Permit 10006729 and Melbourne Water Western
   Treatment Plant Research Permit 8249. Funding for the project was
   provided by Deakin University. The authors declare no conflicts of
   interest.
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NR 53
TC 32
Z9 35
U1 8
U2 63
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0269-8463
EI 1365-2435
J9 FUNCT ECOL
JI Funct. Ecol.
PD APR
PY 2017
VL 31
IS 4
BP 885
EP 893
DI 10.1111/1365-2435.12814
PG 9
WC Ecology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ER1IP
UT WOS:000398543900010
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Palutikof, JP
   Boulter, SL
   Barnett, J
   Rissik, D
AF Palutikof, Jean P.
   Boulter, Sarah L.
   Barnett, Jon
   Rissik, David
BE Palutikof, JP
   Boulter, SL
   Barnett, J
   Rissik, D
TI APPLIED STUDIES IN CLIMATE ADAPTATION Introduction
SO APPLIED STUDIES IN CLIMATE ADAPTATION
LA English
DT Editorial Material; Book Chapter
C1 [Palutikof, Jean P.; Boulter, Sarah L.; Rissik, David] Griffith Univ, Natl Climate Change Adaptat Res Facil, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Barnett, Jon] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, Melbourne, Vic 3010, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; Griffith University - Gold Coast Campus; University
   of Melbourne
RP Palutikof, JP (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Natl Climate Change Adaptat Res Facil, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia.
RI Rissik, David/I-3758-2017
NR 0
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
PI CHICHESTER
PA THE ATRIUM, SOUTHERN GATE, CHICHESTER PO19 8SQ, WEST SUSSEX, ENGLAND
BN 978-1-118-84502-8; 978-1-118-84501-1
PY 2015
BP 1
EP 5
PG 5
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA BD8EI
UT WOS:000363880500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Taylor, A
AF Taylor, Anna
TI Institutional inertia in a changing climate Climate adaptation planning
   in Cape Town, South Africa
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATE CHANGE STRATEGIES AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Africa; Implementation barriers; Local government; Cape Town; Urban
   adaptation
ID BARRIERS; CITIES; REFLECTIONS; GOVERNANCE; KNOWLEDGE; PATHWAYS
AB Purpose - This paper aims to present an investigation of the climate adaptation planning and implementation process undertaken by the municipal government of Cape Town, South Africa, situating the findings within the broader literature on governance-related barriers to adaptation.
   Design/methodology/approach - By developing an in-depth case study using methods of organizational ethnography, the research traces phases of climate adaptation planning and implementation in Cape Town. Applied thematic analysis surfaces issues of coordination, decision-making, resource constraints and tracking progress as key constraints to urban climate adaptation.
   Findings - While considerable progress has been made on developing a citywide climate adaptation plan for Cape Town, implementation is constrained by poor monitoring and feedback within and between departments and a lack of oversight and impetus from central authorities within the government hierarchy. Research limitations/implications - Further research is needed on the interface between technical and political decision-making, governance arrangements that facilitate coordination and iterative adjustment and the organizational uptake of externally commissioned work on climate adaptation.
   Practical implications - The paper points to the need for a climate adaptation coordination function situated higher up in the municipal government structure than the environment department to implement, monitor, evaluate and revise measures to reduce climate risks and vulnerabilities citywide.
   Originality/value - The paper is of value to those seeking to understand local government decision-making, as it pertains to climate adaptation and those looking for means to address climate risks and vulnerabilities in cities, especially in South Africa.
C1 [Taylor, Anna] Univ Cape Town, African Ctr Cities, Environm & Geog Sci Dept, ZA-7925 Cape Town, South Africa.
C3 University of Cape Town
RP Taylor, A (corresponding author), Univ Cape Town, African Ctr Cities, Environm & Geog Sci Dept, ZA-7925 Cape Town, South Africa.
EM anna.taylor@uct.ac.za
RI Taylor, Anna/GYU-1386-2022
FU Mistra Urban Futures, a global research and knowledge center in
   sustainable urban development; Swedish International Development Agenday
   (SIDA); Mistra Foundation for Strategic Development
FX This work was supported by Mistra Urban Futures, a global research and
   knowledge center in sustainable urban development, funded by the Swedish
   International Development Agenday (SIDA) and the Mistra Foundation for
   Strategic Development. The author specially thanks colleagues at the
   City of Cape Town, who shared generously of their time and knowledge,
   and also to the journal editors and three anonymous reviewers for their
   helpful comments.
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NR 60
TC 20
Z9 21
U1 0
U2 25
PU EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BINGLEY
PA HOWARD HOUSE, WAGON LANE, BINGLEY BD16 1WA, W YORKSHIRE, ENGLAND
SN 1756-8692
EI 1756-8706
J9 INT J CLIM CHANG STR
JI Int. J. Clim. Chang. Strateg. Manag.
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 2
BP 194
EP 211
DI 10.1108/IJCCSM-03-2014-0033
PG 18
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DJ3XY
UT WOS:000374141200003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Karimi, M
   Tabiee, M
   Karami, S
   Karimi, V
   Karamidehkordi, E
AF Karimi, Mandana
   Tabiee, Mansour
   Karami, Shobeir
   Karimi, Vahid
   Karamidehkordi, Esmail
TI Climate change and water scarcity impacts on sustainability in semi-arid
   areas: Lessons from the South of Iran
SO GROUNDWATER FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptation; Water scarcity; Rural community; Analytical
   hierarchy processing; Iran
ID ADAPTATION; SIMULATION; CHALLENGES; SYSTEMS; RISK
AB Understanding the effects of complex issues such as water scarcity on human society from the people's perspective is necessary to show how to adapt to these challenges. This research investigates and prioritizes the effects of water scarcity on the sustainability of rural communities through a mixed research methodology, including a case study and a survey in a semi-arid region, located in southern Iran. The results of using the Analytical Hierarchy Processing (AHP) technique showed that local people identify the economic dimension of sustainability as a priority dimension. Moreover, the alternative of unsustainability under water scarcity in the area received the highest priority and had a larger value than the sustainability alternative. This can be the result of the restricting international policies against Iran and the global climatic condition. Local communities, particularly farmers, perceive climate change and water scarcity as a global issue and a local challenge, which causes semi-arid areas to move towards unsustainability rather than sustainability. The sustainability of semiarid areas under water scarcity requires climate change adaptation, appropriate long-term planning, and the removal of restricting international economic policies against nations.
C1 [Karimi, Mandana] Shiraz Univ, Fac Econ Management & Social Sci, Dept Sociol & Social Planning, Islamic Republ Rd, Shiraz 7194684334, Iran.
   [Tabiee, Mansour] Shiraz Univ, Fac Econ Management & Social Sci, Dept Sociol & Social Planning, Islamic Republ Rd, Shiraz 7194684334, Iran.
   [Karami, Shobeir] Persian Gulf Univ, Persian Gulf Res Inst, Bushehr 7516913817, Iran.
   [Karimi, Vahid] Tarbiat Modares Univ TMU, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Extens & Educ, Jalal AleAhmad Rd, Tehran 1411713116, Iran.
   [Karamidehkordi, Esmail] Tarbiat Modares Univ TMU, Fac Agr, Dept Agr Extens & Educ, Agr Extens & Sustainable Rural Dev, Jalal AleAhmad Rd, Tehran 1411713116, Iran.
C3 Shiraz University; Shiraz University; Persian Gulf University; Tarbiat
   Modares University; Tarbiat Modares University
RP Tabiee, M (corresponding author), Shiraz Univ, Fac Econ Management & Social Sci, Dept Sociol & Social Planning, Islamic Republ Rd, Shiraz 7194684334, Iran.
EM mandana.karimi1989@gmail.com; mtabiee@rose.shirazu.ac.ir;
   s.karami@pgu.ac.ir; vahid.karimi@modares.ac.ir;
   e.karamidehkordi@modares.ac.ir
RI Karimi, Vahid/ABF-4619-2020; Karamidehkordi, Esmail/F-9105-2018
OI Karamidehkordi, Esmail/0000-0003-4768-7084; KARIMI,
   VAHID/0000-0003-0203-0652
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NR 95
TC 10
Z9 10
U1 1
U2 3
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2352-801X
J9 GROUNDWATER SUST DEV
JI Groundwater Sustain. Dev.
PD FEB
PY 2024
VL 24
AR 101075
DI 10.1016/j.gsd.2023.101075
EA DEC 2023
PG 10
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA II9Q4
UT WOS:001165818400001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dirksmeier, P
   Nolte, K
   Mewes, L
   Tuitjer, L
AF Dirksmeier, Peter
   Nolte, Kerstin
   Mewes, Lars
   Tuitjer, Leonie
TI The role of climate change awareness for trust in institutions in
   sub-Saharan Africa
SO ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change awareness; trust in partial institutions; trust in
   impartial institutions; sub-Saharan Africa; conflict; mitigation
   policies
ID CHANGE MITIGATION; INFORMAL INSTITUTIONS; POLITICAL VIOLENCE; RISK
   PERCEPTION; ADAPTATION; ETHNICITY; SYNERGIES; ATTITUDES; BEHAVIOR; TRADE
AB Within the context of climate change in sub-Saharan Africa, trust in institutions is an important prerequisite to implement climate change adaptation and mitigation policies. There is a lack of systematic investigation of the relationship between climate change awareness, conflicts, and trust in institutions. We address this pressing research gap based on a regression analysis with trust in institutions as dependent variables, and climate change awareness and violence as independent variables drawing on Afrobarometer individual data and aggregated data on armed conflicts. Our main findings indicate that trust in institutions in sub-Saharan Africa is influenced by both the individual climate change awareness and the violence context. First, we find a negative relationship between those who are aware of climate change and trust in institutions. Second, we observe a socio-economic divide: young, urban and educated parts of the population as well as those who feel their ethnic group is treated unfairly do not trust institutions. Third, we see a regional divide: those far from political centres are not aware of climate change, and those close to the political centres do not trust institutions.
C1 [Dirksmeier, Peter; Nolte, Kerstin; Mewes, Lars] Leibniz Univ Hannover, Inst Econ & Cultural Geog, Hannover, Germany.
   [Tuitjer, Leonie] Univ Bremen, Artec Sustainabil Res Ctr, Bremen, Germany.
   [Nolte, Kerstin] Johann Heinrich von Thunen Inst, Inst Rural Econ, Braunschweig, Germany.
C3 Leibniz University Hannover; University of Bremen; Johann Heinrich von
   Thunen Institute
RP Nolte, K (corresponding author), Leibniz Univ Hannover, Inst Econ & Cultural Geog, Hannover, Germany.; Nolte, K (corresponding author), Johann Heinrich von Thunen Inst, Inst Rural Econ, Braunschweig, Germany.
EM nolte@wigeo.uni-hannover.de
RI Nolte, Kerstin/AAK-1816-2021; Mewes, Lars/AAA-5736-2019
OI Dirksmeier, Peter/0000-0001-9706-004X; Nolte,
   Kerstin/0000-0003-2716-7778; Tuitjer, Leonie/0000-0001-6178-7757
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NR 68
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 3
U2 12
PU IOP Publishing Ltd
PI BRISTOL
PA TEMPLE CIRCUS, TEMPLE WAY, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1748-9326
J9 ENVIRON RES LETT
JI Environ. Res. Lett.
PD SEP 1
PY 2023
VL 18
IS 9
AR 094043
DI 10.1088/1748-9326/acf0d6
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA Q8UF2
UT WOS:001060209100001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Masud, S
   Khan, A
AF Masud, Shafaq
   Khan, Ahmad
TI Policy implementation barriers in climate change adaptation: The case of
   Pakistan
SO ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; climate governance; Pakistan; policy
   analysis
ID GOVERNANCE; ANTHROPOCENE; CHALLENGES
AB This article focuses on the policy implementation barriers that result in poor adaptation and enhanced risk of exposure to extreme vulnerabilities, based on experiences in Pakistan. A number of policy implementation barriers are identified including: (i) Whether policy development is seen as a closed or open consultation process, (ii) Whether policy is seen as a generic document or an instrument for specific actions, and (iii) Whether policy administration is seen as a central or devolved process. As a case study, Pakistan's national climate change policy was considered. Pakistan is the eighth most climate change impacted country in the world. The results conclude that a prevalent top-down frame of management, centred-around federalism, has created vacuums for misinterpretation, poor understanding amongst policy implementers and false expectations of policy goals. A critical aspect of this disconnect is the lack of inclusivity of critical stakeholder groups in the policy design and development stages thus creating various barriers resulting in mistrust between different governing entities and vice versa. The study also highlights the nature of this problem and recommends a closer examination of the prerequisites of engagement in climate decision-making for better understanding and implementation of adaptation practices in de-centralised governance.
C1 [Masud, Shafaq] Univ Fribourg, Dept Geosci, Fribourg, Switzerland.
   [Khan, Ahmad] Univ Maryland, Dept Geog Sci, College Pk, MD USA.
C3 University of Fribourg; University System of Maryland; University of
   Maryland College Park
RP Masud, S (corresponding author), Univ Fribourg, Dept Geosci, Fribourg, Switzerland.
EM shafaqmasud@yahoo.com
RI Khan, Ahmad/AAK-2708-2021
FU Swiss Government Excellence Scholarship
FX This study was conducted as a result of the Swiss Government Excellence
   Scholarship. The author would like to thank the University of Fribourg
   for providing the platform to conduct this research with particular
   acknowledgment to Prof. Christine Bichsel, and Dr. Nadine Salzmann, as
   research mentors and collaborators (who provided assistance in
   proofreading and content review), from the Department of Geosciences,
   University of Fribourg.
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TC 6
Z9 7
U1 4
U2 13
PU WILEY PERIODICALS, INC
PI SAN FRANCISCO
PA ONE MONTGOMERY ST, SUITE 1200, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94104 USA
SN 1756-932X
EI 1756-9338
J9 ENVIRON POLICY GOV
JI Environ. Policy Gov.
PD FEB
PY 2024
VL 34
IS 1
BP 42
EP 52
DI 10.1002/eet.2054
EA MAR 2023
PG 11
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA HI1S9
UT WOS:000958743900001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Niamir, L
   Pachauri, S
AF Niamir, Leila
   Pachauri, Shonali
TI From social and natural vulnerability to human-centered climate
   resilient coastal cities
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; climate change mitigation; multi-level
   governance; behavioral change; human wellbeing
ID GREEN SPACE; ACCESSIBILITY; ADAPTATION; FRAMEWORK; SYSTEMS; HEALTH; CITY
AB Anthropogenic climate change is increasingly affecting every city in the world, including through more intense weather and climate extremes. Climate impacts and risks are magnified in cities, which are home to more than half the world's population. Projections show one billion people will live in areas at risk of coastal hazards by 2050. Sea level rise jeopardizes cities to complicated wind, water, and coastal hazards. Potential impacts on wellbeing include damage to housing, transportation, and energy infrastructure as well as human health. Yet, attention thus far has focused on incremental adaptation responses, with a focus more on infrastructure and technology transitions in coastal cities. Comprehensive transformative actions that specifically incorporate behavioral, cultural and institutional options are largely neglected. In this perspective, we emphasize that immediate and massive effort and involvement from individuals to social entities across sectors, institutions, and systems is required for a transformation toward climate-resilient coastal cities. We conclude by emphasizing that dichotomies between ambitious adaptation and mitigation actions need to be bridged to enhance resilience to warming in coastal cities, and that this requires appropriate multi-level governance mechanisms to coordinate across agents and sectors.
C1 [Niamir, Leila; Pachauri, Shonali] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal IIASA, Energy Climate & Environm ECE Res Program, Laxenburg, Austria.
C3 International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA)
RP Niamir, L (corresponding author), Int Inst Appl Syst Anal IIASA, Energy Climate & Environm ECE Res Program, Laxenburg, Austria.
EM niamir@iiasa.ac.at
RI Niamir, Leila/ABH-9839-2020; Pachauri, Shonali/AAR-7383-2020
OI Pachauri, Shonali/0000-0001-8138-3178
FU Energy Demand changes Induced by Technological and Social innovations
   (EDITS) project; Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry (METI), Japan
FX Authors acknowledge the funding from the Energy Demand changes Induced
   by Technological and Social innovations (EDITS) project, coordinated by
   the Research Institute of Innovative Technology for the Earth (RITE) and
   International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) and funded
   by the Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry (METI), Japan.
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NR 52
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 6
U2 23
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9634
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN CITIES
JI Front. Sustain. Cities
PD MAR 3
PY 2023
VL 5
AR 1137641
DI 10.3389/frsc.2023.1137641
PG 6
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies; Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Urban Studies
GA 9Y4TL
UT WOS:000950451800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Costa, MR
   Martínez, SG
   Méndez, AD
   Costa, CA
   Rosado, AC
   Hidalgo, BD
AF Costa, Miguel Reimao
   Martinez, Susana Gomez
   Mendez, Aniceto Delgado
   Costa, Catarina Alves
   Rosado, Ana Costa
   del Espino Hidalgo, Blanca
TI Sustainable Development in Rural and Peripheral Areas Through the
   Safeguarding of Their Immaterial Cultural Heritage
SO ACE-ARCHITECTURE CITY AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Rural heritage; peripheral areas; intangible cultural heritage; local
   development
AB This paper proposes a Southwestern Iberian perspective on the safeguarding of immaterial cultural heritage in rural and peripheral territories, addressing successful examples of safeguarding actions in different contexts of immaterial heritage study. While approaching different themes within the scope of immaterial heritage - techniques, music and rituals - the success of these examples shares many components. Among them, participation and appropriation by communities are fundamental to cultural heritage recovery and dissemination programs. The first part of the text focuses on traditional construction techniques, showing several programs with different levels of appropriation by the local population. Traditional construction techniques are a heritage tool of a particular relevance in the current context of climate change adaptation and sustainable edification. The second part of the text interprets various activities related to traditional music and dance, to analyse how they have evolved from an auxiliar daily activity to an identity symbol. Finally, the article delves into the safeguarding of festive rituals inside more or less benign circumstances, as local development programs or communities' relocation. Following the lessons learned from these somewhat disparate but productive initiatives, the article sets out a wider range of proposals, aiming to identify future tools for safeguarding and heritage management.
C1 [Costa, Miguel Reimao] Univ Algarve, CEAACP CAM, Faro, Portugal.
   [Martinez, Susana Gomez] Univ Evora, CEAACP CAM, Evora, Portugal.
   [Mendez, Aniceto Delgado; del Espino Hidalgo, Blanca] Andalusian Inst Hist Heritage, Seville, Spain.
   [Costa, Catarina Alves] Univ Nova Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Rosado, Ana Costa] Campo Arqueol Mertola CEAACP, Mertola, Portugal.
C3 Universidade do Algarve; University of Evora; Universidade Nova de
   Lisboa
RP Costa, MR (corresponding author), Univ Algarve, CEAACP CAM, Faro, Portugal.
EM mrcosta@ualg.pt
RI Del Espino Hidalgo, Blanca/AAI-2675-2020; Rosado, Ana
   Costa/AAW-2462-2021; Del Espino Hidalgo, Blanca/H-9975-2015
OI Alves Costa, Catarina/0000-0002-7297-2840; Rosado, Ana
   Costa/0000-0002-2653-6167; Del Espino Hidalgo,
   Blanca/0000-0002-1442-7385; Delgado Mendez, Aniceto
   Jesus/0000-0002-5607-5605; Gomez Martinez, Susana/0000-0001-6032-1904
FU "Sistema de Innovacion para el Patrimonio de la Andalucia Rural
   (SIN_PAR)" [PYC20 RE 029 IAPH]; FEDER operational program in Andalusia;
   "Sistema de Innovacion Turistica para el Patrimonio de la Andalucia
   Rural (SIT_PAR)" [PY20-00298]; Secretaria General de Universidades,
   Investigacion y Tecnologia of the Consejeria de Transformacion
   Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y Universidades of the Junta de
   Andalucia
FX This work has been developed within the framework of the following
   projects, which contributed to the funding of editing and proofreading
   costs: The project "Sistema de Innovacion para el Patrimonio de la
   Andalucia Rural (SIN_PAR)", granted through the 2020 call for R+D+i
   projects of the PAIDI 2020, attributed code PY20-00298, and the project
   "Sistema de Innovacion Turistica para el Patrimonio de la Andalucia
   Rural (SIT_PAR)", granted through the 2020 call for grants for the
   implementation of projects of collaborative interest in the field of
   CEIS, attributed code PYC20 RE 029 IAPH. Both grants come from the
   Secretaria General de Universidades, Investigacion y Tecnologia of the
   Consejeria de Transformacion Economica, Industria, Conocimiento y
   Universidades of the Junta de Andalucia and have been co-financed by the
   FEDER operational program in Andalusia for the period 2014-2020.
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NR 37
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 4
U2 17
PU UNIV POLITECNICA CATALUNYA
PI BARCELONA
PA AVDA DIAGONAL 649, BARCELONA, 08028, SPAIN
SN 1886-4805
J9 ACE-ARCHIT CITY ENVI
JI ACE-Archit. City Environ.
PD OCT
PY 2022
VL 17
IS 50
AR 11386
DI 10.5821/ace.17.50.11386
PG 22
WC Architecture; Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Architecture; Urban Studies
GA 8O9UP
UT WOS:000926177200006
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Setiadi, R
   Lo, AY
AF Setiadi, Rukuh
   Lo, Alex Y.
TI Does Policy Research Really Matter for Local Climate Change Policies?
SO URBAN POLICY AND RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; policy research; vulnerability assessment;
   advocacy coalition; policy impacts; Indonesia
ID SCIENCE
AB This paper examines the role of policy-relevant research in climate change policy development. It attempts to address a practically important question: does policy research actually make a difference in the processes of formulating and institutionalizing local climate change policy? Two case studies from Central Java Indonesia are presented. The analysis focuses on the policy development processes in the cities of Semarang and Pekalongan, both of which were based on an urban climate vulnerability assessment. We discuss and compare the policy-making processes in terms of three analytic dimensions: the type of policy measures, agent, and policy approach. We examine the relationship between assessment outcomes and the efforts to institutionalize climate change policy in the two cities. These case studies show that although policy actors in both cities have developed strategies and policy measures for addressing climate change, the quality of policy-relevant research was a marginal consideration in the policy formulation processes. An established agenda within a policy network had greater impacts on policy-making than research outputs, which were articulated and used in the context of this agenda. Advocacy coalitions re-defined and re-interpreted what research has shown. Understanding this ability is key to ascertain why or why not policy-relevant research matters.
C1 [Setiadi, Rukuh] Diponegoro Univ, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Semarang, Indonesia.
   [Lo, Alex Y.] Univ Hong Kong, Kadoorie Inst, Dept Geog, Hong Kong, Peoples R China.
C3 Diponegoro University; University of Hong Kong
RP Setiadi, R (corresponding author), Diponegoro Univ, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Semarang, Indonesia.
EM rukuh.setiadi@pwk.undip.ac.id
RI Setiadi, Rukuh/AAM-2309-2020; Lo, Alex/B-7948-2008
OI Lo, Alex/0000-0002-5953-4176; Setiadi, Rukuh/0000-0003-3419-2584
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NR 30
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 3
U2 19
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0811-1146
EI 1476-7244
J9 URBAN POLICY RES
JI Urban Policy Res.
PD JAN 2
PY 2019
VL 37
IS 1
BP 111
EP 124
DI 10.1080/08111146.2017.1377607
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban
   Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography; Public Administration;
   Urban Studies
GA HW0HR
UT WOS:000466362000008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Williams, DS
   Costa, MM
   Celliers, L
   Sutherland, C
AF Williams, David Samuel
   Costa, Maria Manez
   Celliers, Louis
   Sutherland, Catherine
TI Informal Settlements and Flooding: Identifying Strengths and Weaknesses
   in Local Governance for Water Management
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE water governance; multi-sector partnerships; flooding; informal
   settlements
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; RISK;
   DURBAN; PARTICIPATION; COMMUNICATION; PERCEPTION; COMPLEXITY; CHALLENGES
AB Urbanization and climate change are compounding the vulnerability of flooding for the urban poor, particularly in the Global South. However, local governance can be a greater determinant of flood risk than the hazard itself. Identifying strengths and weaknesses in local governance for water management is therefore crucial. This paper presents a governance assessment for Quarry Road West informal settlement, Durban, South Africa, in relation to flood risk by applying the Capital Approach Framework. Through developing a deeper understanding of the current governance system, the embeddedness of several social values can also be gauged. This is important particularly for integrative and transdisciplinary management of flood risk, enacted in the case of Quarry Road West informal settlement through the Palmiet Rehabilitation Project, a multi sector partnership at the climate change and water governance interface. Findings from this study indicate that, currently, climate change adaptation remains a challenge for decision-makers and policy-planners. A more effective integration of the residents of Quarry Road West informal settlement into local governance for water management is urgently needed. This is particularly important in the context of informal settlements that are marginalized and often lacking governance mechanisms to affect change.
C1 [Williams, David Samuel; Costa, Maria Manez; Celliers, Louis] Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, D-20095 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Sutherland, Catherine] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Built Environm & Dev Studies, ZA-4041 Durban, South Africa.
C3 Helmholtz Association; Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon; University of Kwazulu
   Natal
RP Williams, DS (corresponding author), Helmholtz Zentrum Geesthacht, Climate Serv Ctr Germany GERICS, D-20095 Hamburg, Germany.
EM david.williams@hzg.de; maria.manez@hzg.de; louis.celliers@hzg.de;
   sutherlandc@ukzn.ac.za
RI Celliers, Louis/GRO-6282-2022; Williams, David/ABD-7998-2020; Manez
   Costa, Maria/P-1225-2017
OI /0000-0002-1418-589X; Celliers, Louis/0000-0001-5096-1713; Manez Costa,
   Maria/0000-0001-5415-0811
FU KnowHow project under the European Commission Marie Curie IRSES Grant
   [PIRSES-GA-2013-612-615]; European Union project Enhancing Risk
   Management Partnerships for Catastrophic Natural Hazards in Europe
   (ENHANCE); CLIMWAYS project of the National Research Foundation South
   Africa
FX The authors would like to thank the reviewers for their invaluable
   comments, contributing significantly to the depth and meaningfulness of
   the paper. David Samuel Williams, Maria Manez Costa, and Louis Celliers
   were funded by the KnowHow project under the European Commission Marie
   Curie IRSES Grant (PIRSES-GA-2013-612-615). The authors would further
   like to thank the European Union project Enhancing Risk Management
   Partnerships for Catastrophic Natural Hazards in Europe (ENHANCE) for
   support. Gratitude must also be extended to the Council for Scientific
   and Industrial Research (CSIR), who were the host organization. Finally,
   without the dedicated help and support of Sibongile Buthelezi and
   Duduzile Khumalo, both funded through the CLIMWAYS project of the
   National Research Foundation South Africa, this research would not have
   been possible.
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TC 39
Z9 41
U1 7
U2 33
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JUL
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 7
AR 871
DI 10.3390/w10070871
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA GR4LJ
UT WOS:000442579700054
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kim, D
   Lee, J
AF Kim, Donghyun
   Lee, Junbeom
TI Development of a Web-Based Tool for Climate Change Risk Assessment in
   the Business Sector
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change risk assessment; climatic hazard; climate change
   adaptation; web-based tool; climate risk
ID CHANGE IMPACTS; ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY; INDICATORS; CAPACITY; SCIENCE
AB The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change 2013 report claims that climate change from human-induced greenhouse gas emissions will cause increasing temperatures in many regions and various detrimental effects such as rising sea levels, ecosystem changes, droughts, and floods. This study proposes a method for assessing the climate risks resulting from climate change as well as a tool that companies can use to assess those risks. The method for assessing climate risk is proposed in accordance with the ISO 31000 risk management process. We then design a web-based tool to implement the climate change risk assessment process. The data the tool generates enable companies to identify and analyze their climate risks to reduce potentially negative future financial impacts. The data on potential damage costs indicate that climate change is no longer an environmental issue but rather an economic one for companies, and the results presented through the proposed assessment method can be used to establish countermeasures and sustainable planning at companies. The results of this research are significant in that they provide companies with the critical information needed to improve their planning and response to climate risk.
C1 [Kim, Donghyun; Lee, Junbeom] Korea Environm Inst, 370 Sicheong Daero, Sejong 30147, South Korea.
C3 Korea Environment Institute (KEI)
RP Kim, D (corresponding author), Korea Environm Inst, 370 Sicheong Daero, Sejong 30147, South Korea.
EM donghyunkim@kei.re.kr; jblee@kei.re.kr
RI Kim, Donghyun/HDO-8306-2022
OI Kim, Donghyun/0000-0003-3711-5103; Lee, Junbeom/0000-0001-6317-249X
FU Korea Environment Institute [2016-001-05]
FX This study was performed by the Korea Environment Institute (Project
   Number: 2016-001-05).
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JI Sustainability
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PY 2016
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AR 1013
DI 10.3390/su8101013
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
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WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA EE1BE
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DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mcleod, E
   Szuster, B
   Tompkins, EL
   Marshall, N
   Downing, T
   Wongbusarakum, S
   Patwardhan, A
   Hamza, M
   Anderson, C
   Bharwani, S
   Hansen, L
   Rubinoff, P
AF Mcleod, Elizabeth
   Szuster, Brian
   Tompkins, Emma L.
   Marshall, Nadine
   Downing, Thomas
   Wongbusarakum, Supin
   Patwardhan, Anand
   Hamza, Mo
   Anderson, Cheryl
   Bharwani, Sukaina
   Hansen, Lara
   Rubinoff, Pamela
TI Using Expert Knowledge to Develop a Vulnerability and Adaptation
   Framework and Methodology for Application in Tropical Island Communities
SO COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate vulnerability; Delphi; vulnerability framework
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; RESILIENCE; ASSESSMENTS; UNCERTAINTY;
   LEVEL
AB Climate change threatens tropical coastal communities and ecosystems. Governments, resource managers, and communities recognize the value of assessing the social and ecological impacts of climate change, but there is little consensus on the most effective framework to support vulnerability and adaptation assessments. The framework presented in this research is based on a gap analysis developed from the recommendations of climate and adaptation experts. The article highlights social and ecological factors that affect vulnerability to climate change; adaptive capacity and adaptation options informing policy and conservation management decisions; and a methodology including criteria to assess current and future vulnerability to climate change. The framework is intended for conservation practitioners working in developing countries, small island nations, and traditional communities. It identifies core components that assess climate change impacts on coastal communities and environments at the local scale, and supports the identification of locally relevant adaptation strategies. Although the literature supporting vulnerability adaptation assessments is extensive, little emphasis has been placed on the systematic validation of these tools. To address this, we validate the framework using the Delphi technique, a group facilitation technique used to achieve convergence of expert opinion, and address gaps in previous vulnerability assessments.
C1 [Mcleod, Elizabeth] Nature Conservancy, Austin, TX 78749 USA.
   [Szuster, Brian] Univ Hawaii, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
   [Tompkins, Emma L.] Univ Southampton, Southampton, Hants, England.
   [Marshall, Nadine] James Cook Univ, CSIRO, Land & Water, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Marshall, Nadine] James Cook Univ, Sch Marine & Environm Sci, Townsville, Qld 4811, Australia.
   [Downing, Thomas] Oxford Ctr Innovat OCFI, Global Climate Adaptat Partnership, Oxford, England.
   [Wongbusarakum, Supin] Univ Hawaii, Joint Inst Marine & Atmospher Res, NOAA, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
   [Wongbusarakum, Supin] NOAA, Ecosyst Sci Div, Pacific Isl Fisheries Sci Ctr, Honolulu, HI USA.
   [Patwardhan, Anand] Univ Maryland, College Pk, MD 20742 USA.
   [Hamza, Mo] Univ Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Anderson, Cheryl] Univ Hawaii, Social Sci Res Inst, Honolulu, HI 96822 USA.
   [Bharwani, Sukaina] Oxford Ctr, Stockholm Environm Inst, Oxford, England.
   [Hansen, Lara] EcoAdapt, Bainbridge Isl, WA USA.
   [Rubinoff, Pamela] Univ Rhode Isl, Coastal Resources Ctr, Narragansett, RI USA.
C3 Nature Conservancy; University of Hawaii System; University of
   Southampton; James Cook University; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial
   Research Organisation (CSIRO); James Cook University; National Oceanic
   Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) - USA; University of Hawaii System; National
   Oceanic Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) - USA; University System of Maryland;
   University of Maryland College Park; University of Copenhagen;
   University of Hawaii System; University of Oxford; University of Rhode
   Island
RP Mcleod, E (corresponding author), Nature Conservancy, 7707 Vail Valley Dr, Austin, TX 78749 USA.
EM emcleod@tnc.org
RI Hamza, Mo/ABC-1814-2020; patwardhan, anand/GOK-0386-2022; Szuster,
   Brian/AAF-7228-2020; Marshall, Nadine/D-9339-2011; Tompkins,
   Emma/B-6863-2016
OI Bharwani, Sukaina/0000-0002-0152-4565; Tompkins,
   Emma/0000-0002-4825-9797; Hansen, Lara/0009-0001-9982-0695; Hamza,
   Mo/0000-0002-1908-1627; marshall, nadine/0000-0003-4463-3558
FU Nature Conservancy; German Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature
   Conservation and Nuclear Safety (BMUB)
FX This study is an outcome of a project that is financially supported by
   the Nature Conservancy and the German Federal Ministry for the
   Environment, Nature Conservation and Nuclear Safety (BMUB). This study
   is part of the International Climate Initiative (IKI); the BMUB supports
   this initiative on the basis of a decision adopted by the German
   Bundestag. The manuscript contents are solely the opinions of the
   authors and do not constitute a statement of policy, decision, or
   position on behalf of NOAA or the US Government.
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NR 54
TC 4
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 28
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 0892-0753
EI 1521-0421
J9 COAST MANAGE
JI Coast. Manage.
PY 2015
VL 43
IS 4
SI SI
BP 365
EP 382
DI 10.1080/08920753.2015.1046803
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CQ0OH
UT WOS:000360295500003
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Finlayson, CM
AF Finlayson, C. Max
TI Climate change and the wise use of wetlands: information from Australian
   wetlands
SO HYDROBIOLOGIA
LA English
DT Article
DE Ramsar Convention; Ecological character; Baseline; Adaptation
ID CONSERVATION; BIODIVERSITY
AB This paper summarises key issues from papers included in a special issue about the impacts of climate change on Australian wetlands. The papers covered: the assessment of wetlands under climate change, adaptation and engineering responses to climate change, and restoring wetlands under a changing climate. The key issues from these papers were used to indicate areas where the Ramsar Convention could develop guidance as part of its' Handbooks for the Wise Use of Wetlands. These included: (i) assessing changes in the distribution of species and whether these constitute a change in the ecological character of the wetland; (ii) assessing the usefulness of models of wetland response to climate change; (iii) assessing the value in allocating water to protected sites where restoration would be contingent on reallocation of larger volumes of water; (iv) assessing the efficacy of engineering responses with the potential to deliver more water-efficient environmental outcomes for wetlands and (v) determining if the description of the ecological character of a Ramsar site at the time of listing is a suitable reference for management purposes. With these issues in mind it is recommended that further attention is directed towards determining and responding to the ecological consequences of climate change.
C1 Charles Sturt Univ, Inst Land Water & Soc, Albury, NSW 2640, Australia.
C3 Charles Sturt University
RP Finlayson, CM (corresponding author), Charles Sturt Univ, Inst Land Water & Soc, POB 789, Albury, NSW 2640, Australia.
EM mfinlayson@csu.edu.au
RI Finlayson, Colin/S-5031-2019
OI Finlayson, Colin Maxwell/0000-0001-9991-7289
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   [Anonymous], 2009, GLOBAL PEATLAND CO2
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NR 27
TC 24
Z9 24
U1 2
U2 49
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0018-8158
EI 1573-5117
J9 HYDROBIOLOGIA
JI Hydrobiologia
PD MAY
PY 2013
VL 708
IS 1
BP 145
EP 152
DI 10.1007/s10750-013-1474-0
PG 8
WC Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA 126OW
UT WOS:000317628200010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Reid, GH
AF Reid, Gregory H.
TI Building resilience to climate change in rain-fed agricultural
   enterprises: An integrated property planning tool
SO AGRICULTURE AND HUMAN VALUES
LA English
DT Article
DE Australia; Climate change; Grazing; Integrated property planning; Soil
   moisture planning
ID SOIL; PASTURE; MANAGEMENT; SYSTEMS
AB In response to a drying climate, an integrated property planning tool was developed over three years to help landowners make better use of available rainfall. A sequence was identified which indicated how parts of each property are affected by soil moisture limitations. The sequence was combined with soil properties to indicate targeted strategies for each location aimed to improve soil moisture availability, biomass utilisation, and long-term viability of the farm or ranching enterprise. As a result of training of land owners and operators in use of this tool, 97% of participants indicated that they have begun or intend to make changes in land management; 78% are intending to make three or more substantial changes; and 91% felt better prepared for the impacts of climate change. The key to the success of this technique is that it identifies critical sustainable production drivers in a simple plan format and offers tailored management options which can address more variable climate conditions. The integrated planning tool has application as a driver of climate change adaptation in agricultural regions where farm units contain substantial landscape variation and seasonal rainfall is frequently limiting to production.
C1 NSW Dept Primary Ind, Nat Resource Advisory Serv, Wollongbar, NSW 2477, Australia.
C3 Department of Primary Industries & Regional Development NSW
RP Reid, GH (corresponding author), NSW Dept Primary Ind, Nat Resource Advisory Serv, Bruxner Highway, Wollongbar, NSW 2477, Australia.
EM greg.reid@dpi.nsw.gov.au
FU Northern Rivers Catchment Management Authority
FX "Landscan,'' a training package authored by Mike Keys, provided a
   foundation for the development of the extension program outlined in this
   paper. Funding was provided by the Northern Rivers Catchment Management
   Authority.
CR [Anonymous], FARMING PROFITABLY C
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NR 17
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 3
U2 18
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0889-048X
EI 1572-8366
J9 AGR HUM VALUES
JI Agric. Human Values
PD DEC
PY 2009
VL 26
IS 4
SI SI
BP 391
EP 397
DI 10.1007/s10460-008-9168-3
PG 7
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary; History & Philosophy Of Science;
   Sociology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; History & Philosophy of Science; Sociology
GA 505YN
UT WOS:000270738300013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhou, Z
   Deng, QL
   Yang, G
   Lin, YL
AF Zhou, Zeng
   Deng, Qinli
   Yang, Guang
   Lin, Yaolin
TI Quantitative Study of Using Piloti for Passive Climate Adaptability in a
   Hot-Summer and Cold-Winter City in China
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation; outdoor thermal environment; hot-summer and
   cold-winter; Piloti
ID OUTDOOR THERMAL ENVIRONMENT; PEDESTRIAN WIND ENVIRONMENT; URBAN CLIMATE;
   HEAT; COMFORT; SIMULATION; MITIGATION; PREDICTION; GUIDELINES; DENSITY
AB There has been an insufficient study of passive climate adaptability that considers both the summer and winter season for the outdoor thermal environment of hot-summer and cold-winter cities. In this study, we performed a quantitative simulation to research the passive climate adaptability of a residential area, considering piloti as the main method for climate adaptation in a hot-summer and cold-winter city in China. Numerical simulations were performed with a coupled simulation method of convection, radiation, and conduction. A cubic non-linear k-epsilon model proposed by Craft et al. was selected as the turbulence model and three-dimensional multi-reflections of shortwave and longwave radiations were considered in the radiation simulation. Through the simulation, we found that setting the piloti at the two ends of the building was the optimal piloti arrangement for climate adaptation. Then the relationship between the piloti ratio (0%, 20%, 40%, 60%, and 80%) and the outdoor thermal environment was studied. It could be concluded that with the increasing piloti ratio, the wind velocity increased, the mean radiant temperature (MRT) decreased slightly, and the average standard effective temperature (SET*) decreased to 3.6 degrees C in summer, while in winter, with the increasing piloti ratio, the wind velocity, MRT, and SET* changed slightly. The wind environment significantly affected the SET* value, and the piloti ratio should be between 12% and 38% to avoid wind-induced discomfort.
C1 [Zhou, Zeng] Wuhan Univ, Sch Urban Design, Wuhan 430070, Peoples R China.
   [Deng, Qinli; Lin, Yaolin] Wuhan Univ Technol, Sch Civil Engn & Architecture, Wuhan 430070, Peoples R China.
   [Yang, Guang] Liaoning Tech Univ, Coll Engn & Architecture, Fuxin 123000, Peoples R China.
C3 Wuhan University; Wuhan University of Technology; Liaoning Technical
   University
RP Deng, QL (corresponding author), Wuhan Univ Technol, Sch Civil Engn & Architecture, Wuhan 430070, Peoples R China.
EM haomaoz@whu.edu.cn; deng4213@whut.edu.cn; yangguang_tm@lntu.edu.cn;
   yaolinlin@gmail.com
RI Lin, Yaolin/K-1467-2017
OI Lin, Yaolin/0000-0002-8673-3736
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [51608405, 51808410];
   Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [WUT:
   2017IVB048, 2042016kf0007]
FX This project was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of
   China (51608405, 51808410), and the Fundamental Research Funds for the
   Central Universities (WUT: 2017IVB048; 2042016kf0007).
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NR 51
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 4
U2 32
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD OCT
PY 2018
VL 15
IS 10
AR 2202
DI 10.3390/ijerph15102202
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA GY7TQ
UT WOS:000448818100144
PM 30304857
OA Green Published, gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Weaver, TD
AF Weaver, Timothy D.
TI The meaning of Neandertal skeletal morphology
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF
   AMERICA
LA English
DT Article
DE cranium; human evolution; modern human origins; postcranium
ID BODY PROPORTIONS; BERGMANNS RULE; EVOLUTION; INTEGRATION; HOMINID; HOMO;
   PATTERNS; HUMANS; CAVE; SIZE
AB A procedure is outlined for distinguishing among competing hypotheses for fossil morphology and then used to evaluate current views on the meaning of Neandertal skeletal morphology. Three explanations have dominated debates about the meaning of Neandertal cranial features: climatic adaptation, anterior dental loading, and genetic drift. Neither climatic adaptation nor anterior dental loading are well supported, but genetic drift is consistent with the available evidence. Climatic adaptation and activity patterns are the most discussed explanations for Neandertal postcranial features. Robust empirical relationships between climate and body form in extant humans and other endotherms currently make climatic adaptation the most plausible explanation for the wide bodies and relatively short limbs of Neandertals, and many additional postcranial features are likely secondary consequences of these overall skeletal proportions. Activity patterns may explain certain Neandertal postcranial features, but unlike the situation for climate, relationships in extant humans between morphology and activities are typically not well established. For both the cranium and the post-cranium, changes in diet or activity patterns may underlie why Neandertals and Pleistocene modern humans tend to be more robust than Holocene humans.
C1 [Weaver, Timothy D.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Anthropol, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
   [Weaver, Timothy D.] Max Planck Inst Evolutionary Anthropol, Dept Human Evolut, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany.
C3 University of California System; University of California Davis; Max
   Planck Society
RP Weaver, TD (corresponding author), Univ Calif Davis, Dept Anthropol, 1 Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
EM tdweaver@ucdavis.edu
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NR 76
TC 103
Z9 128
U1 1
U2 45
PU NATL ACAD SCIENCES
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2101 CONSTITUTION AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20418 USA
SN 0027-8424
J9 P NATL ACAD SCI USA
JI Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A.
PD SEP 22
PY 2009
VL 106
IS 38
BP 16028
EP 16033
DI 10.1073/pnas.0903864106
PG 6
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 497PF
UT WOS:000270071600008
PM 19805258
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU López-Teloxa, LC
   Monterroso-Rivas, AI
AF Lopez-Teloxa, Leticia Citlaly
   Monterroso-Rivas, Alejandro Ismael
TI A Spatio-Temporal Analysis of the Frequency of Droughts in Mexico's
   Forest Ecosystems
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE standardised precipitation index; climate exposure; drought intensity;
   spatio-temporal analysis; Mexico; forest
ID EXTREME DROUGHTS
AB Droughts can affect forest ecosystems and lead to soil degradation, biodiversity loss, and desertification. Not all regions of Mexico are affected in the same way, as some areas are naturally more prone to drought due to their geographical location. Therefore, the objective of this work was to carry out a spatio-temporal analysis of the occurrence of droughts (severe and extreme) in Mexican forest systems, covering the period 2000-2021, and to study the area covered by these events in Mexican forest systems. This analysis was divided into three stages: the classification of land use and vegetation, spatial mapping and the classification of drought intensity, and an analysis of drought frequency and probability in forest systems. The results show that more than 46% of Mexico's forest area experienced severe and extreme droughts during the 21-year period studied. Broadleaved forests were most affected by severe and extreme droughts, with a frequency of 6 years. The increasing frequency of droughts poses a major challenge to the resilience of forest ecosystems in Mexico, highlighting the need to implement climate change adaptation and forest management measures to protect the country's biodiversity and natural resources.
C1 [Lopez-Teloxa, Leticia Citlaly] Univ Autonoma Chapingo, Div Ciencias Forestales, Texcoco 56230, Mexico.
   [Monterroso-Rivas, Alejandro Ismael] Univ Autonoma Chapingo, Dept Suelos, Texcoco 56230, Mexico.
RP López-Teloxa, LC (corresponding author), Univ Autonoma Chapingo, Div Ciencias Forestales, Texcoco 56230, Mexico.
EM al2300036p@chapingo.mx; aimrivas@correo.chapingo.mx
RI Monterroso Rivas, Alejandro/GRE-7561-2022; Lopez, Leticia/ACJ-0409-2022
OI Lopez Teloxa, Leticia Citlaly/0000-0002-0258-325X; Monterroso-Rivas,
   Alejandro Ismael/0000-0003-4348-8918
FU Consejo Nacional de Humanidades, Ciencias y Tecnologias (CONAHCYT)
FX This research received no external funding. Lopez receives financial
   support from the Consejo Nacional de Humanidades, Ciencias y Tecnologias
   (CONAHCYT) for her postdoctoral stay in the Postgraduate Programme in
   Forestry and Environmental Sciences at Universidad Autonoma Chapingo.
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NR 94
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 7
U2 7
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 7
AR 1241
DI 10.3390/f15071241
PG 17
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA ZT8X7
UT WOS:001277643700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Romero-Perdomo, F
   Carvajalino-Umaña, JD
   Moreno-Gallego, JL
   Ardila, N
   González-Curbelo, MA
AF Romero-Perdomo, Felipe
   Carvajalino-Umana, Juan David
   Moreno-Gallego, Jaime Leonardo
   Ardila, Natalia
   Gonzalez-Curbelo, Miguel Angel
TI Research Trends on Climate Change and Circular Economy from a Knowledge
   Mapping Perspective
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE sustainable development goals; sustainability; greenhouse gases;
   bioeconomy; renewable energy; nature-based solutions
AB The circular economy (CE) has been proposed as a potentially significant catalyst to enhance the current response to the global climate crisis. The objective of this study was to investigate the scientific literature of the research between climate change and CE adopting a knowledge mapping approach. Based on a total of 789 peer-reviewed publications extracted from Scopus, we found that research on climate change and CE is continually growing and interdisciplinary in nature. Europe notably leads scientific production. Keyword evolution shows that CE has been influenced by more lines of research than climate change. We also found that waste management is the CE approach most associated with climate change, mitigation is the climate action most impacted by CE, and food is the most reported greenhouse gas (GHG)-emitting material. However, there are knowledge gaps in the integration of the social dimension, the promotion of climate change adaptation, and the association of sustainable development goal (SDG) 13. Finally, we identified four potentially valuable directions for future studies: (i) CE practices, (ii) bioeconomy, (iii) climate and energy, and (iv) sustainability and natural resources, in which carbon recovery technologies, green materials, regional supply chains, circular agriculture models, and nature-based solutions are promising themes.
C1 [Romero-Perdomo, Felipe; Carvajalino-Umana, Juan David; Gonzalez-Curbelo, Miguel Angel] Univ EAN, Fac Ingn, Dept Ciencias Basicas, Bogota 110221, Colombia.
   [Romero-Perdomo, Felipe] Corp Colombiana Invest Agr AGROSAVIA Tibaitata, Mosquera 250047, Colombia.
   [Moreno-Gallego, Jaime Leonardo] Univ Andes, Dept Biol Sci, Max Planck Tandem Grp Computat Biol, Bogota 111711, Colombia.
   [Moreno-Gallego, Jaime Leonardo] Max Planck Inst Dev Biol, Dept Microbiome Sci, D-72076 Tubingen, Germany.
   [Ardila, Natalia] Org Naciones Unidas, Pacto Global Red Colombia, Bogota 110221, Colombia.
C3 Corporacion Colombiana de Investigacion Agropecuaria, AGROSAVIA;
   Universidad de los Andes (Colombia); Max Planck Society
RP González-Curbelo, MA (corresponding author), Univ EAN, Fac Ingn, Dept Ciencias Basicas, Bogota 110221, Colombia.
EM fromero44146@universidadean.edu.co; jcarvaj14023@universidadean.edu.co;
   jl.moreno116@uniandes.edu.co; natalia.ardila@pactoglobal-colombia.org;
   magonzalez@universidadean.edu.co
RI ; Gonzalez Curbelo, Miguel Angel/I-7165-2016
OI Romero-Perdomo, Felipe/0000-0002-4277-1925; Gonzalez Curbelo, Miguel
   Angel/0000-0001-6047-4302
FU Universidad EAN
FX This research was funded by Universidad EAN.
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NR 63
TC 22
Z9 22
U1 2
U2 51
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD JAN
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 1
AR 521
DI 10.3390/su14010521
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ZE8YW
UT WOS:000759165000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gersonius, B
   Vonk, B
   Ashley, RM
   den Heijer, F
   Klerk, WJ
   Manojlovic, N
   Rijke, J
   Sayers, P
   Pathirana, A
AF Gersonius, Berry
   Vonk, Bart
   Ashley, Richard M.
   den Heijer, Frank
   Klerk, Wouter Jan
   Manojlovic, Natasa
   Rijke, Jeroen
   Sayers, Paul
   Pathirana, Assela
TI Maturity Improvements in Flood Protection Asset Management across the
   North Sea Region
SO INFRASTRUCTURES
LA English
DT Article
DE asset management; climate change adaptation; flood protection; flood
   risk management; maturity analysis
AB North Sea Region countries depend heavily on flood protection infrastructure, such as dikes, dams, sluices and flood gates. Knowledge on where, when and how much to invest to ensure functioning is of crucial importance for asset owners and operators. This requires asset management approaches that are adaptable, respond to feedback and function within various contexts. The FAIR (Flood defense infrastructure Asset management & Investment in Renovation, adaptation, optimisation and maintenance) project has developed a unique framework to ensure that asset management processes are adaptive, comprehensive and make effective connections across strategic, tactical and operational contexts. The framework has for the first time informed an assessment of maturity of five flood protection asset management organisations in the North Sea Region, using a seven-factor maturity assessment model. This paper describes the self-assessment process and the self-reported maturity changes during the project. Maturity assessments were undertaken on two occasions, at the start of the project, and again toward the end. This has revealed how the baseline level of maturity for each organisation developed over the course of the three-year project. The observed maturity changes indicate that adopting the FAIR framework has added value in improving current approaches to asset management.
C1 [Gersonius, Berry] ResilienServices, NL-2613 PN Delft, Netherlands.
   [Vonk, Bart] Rijkswaterstaat, NL-3526 LA Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Ashley, Richard M.] EcoFutures Ltd, Honley HD9 6JW, Holmfirth, England.
   [den Heijer, Frank; Rijke, Jeroen] HAN Univ Appl Sci, Sustainable River Management Grp, Ruitenberglaan 26, NL-6826 CC Arnhem, Netherlands.
   [Klerk, Wouter Jan] Deltares, NL-2629 HV Delft, Netherlands.
   [Manojlovic, Natasa] Hamburg Univ Technol, Wasserbau, D-21073 Hamburg, Germany.
   [Sayers, Paul] Sayers & Partners, Watlington OX49 5PY, England.
   [Pathirana, Assela] UNDP, Male 20026, Maldives.
C3 Deltares; Hamburg University of Technology
RP Gersonius, B (corresponding author), ResilienServices, NL-2613 PN Delft, Netherlands.
EM berry@resiliense.nl; bart.vonk@rws.nl; r.ashley@sheffield.ac.uk;
   frank.denheijer@han.nl; wouterjan.klerk@deltares.nl;
   natasa.manojlovic@tuhh.de; j.rijke@han.nl;
   paul.sayers@sayersandpartners.co.uk; assela.pathirana@undp.org
RI Gersonius, Berry/C-7724-2009; Sayers, Paul/AGK-5687-2022; Pathirana,
   Assela/B-5189-2011
OI Klerk, Wouter Jan/0000-0002-6777-2705; Sayers, Paul/0000-0003-2160-1959
FU North Sea Region Programme 2014-2020, through the FAIR Project; EPSRC
   [EP/I029346/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX This research was funded by North Sea Region Programme 2014-2020,
   through the FAIR Project.
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NR 24
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2412-3811
J9 INFRASTRUCTURES-BASE
JI Infrastructures-Basel
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 5
IS 12
AR 112
DI 10.3390/infrastructures5120112
PG 13
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil; Transportation
   Science & Technology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering; Transportation
GA QP2CX
UT WOS:000623644600008
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, WG
   Wang, WJ
   Hou, GL
   Gong, C
   Jiang, M
   Lyu, XG
AF Zhang, Wenguang
   Wang, Wenjuan
   Hou, Guanglei
   Gong, Chao
   Jiang, Ming
   Lyu, Xianguo
TI Cooling effects of different wetlands in semi-arid rural region of
   Northeast China
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
ID LAND-SURFACE TEMPERATURE; SPLIT-WINDOW ALGORITHM; WORLDS ECOSYSTEM
   SERVICES; CLIMATE-CHANGE; WESTERN JILIN; EMISSIVITY; SENSITIVITY;
   DERIVATION; IMPACTS
AB Wetland ecosystems play an important role in regulating local and regional climates through evaporative cooling effects that affect the exchange of energy and water with atmosphere. A lot of researches had been focused on the wetland cooling effect, especially in mitigating urban heat island effect. However, the intensity and influencing factors of wetland cooling effect currently cannot be thorough explained. In this study, we assessed the cooling effect of wetlands with different types in rural area of Northeast China by using split-window algorithm (SWA) to estimate land surface temperatures (LST) from Landsat-8 thermal infrared sensor. We used correlation analysis to examine the relationships between characteristics of wetlands and cooling effect. Our results showed that paddy fields had the largest cooling effects than lakes followed by marshes for human disturbance. Size and shaped complexity were important characteristics to determine wetland cooling effects. Although our results suggested that larger size of wetlands might have higher intensity and spatial extent of cooling effects, small size of wetlands might have large or almost similar amount of cooling effects with the larger ones. Our findings have important implications for land managers and policy makers to design effective plans for conservation and climate change adaptation.
C1 [Zhang, Wenguang; Wang, Wenjuan; Hou, Guanglei; Gong, Chao; Jiang, Ming; Lyu, Xianguo] Chinese Acad Sci, Northeast Inst Geog & Agroecol, Key Lab Wetland Ecol & Environm, Changchun 130102, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Northeast Institute of Geography &
   Agroecology, CAS
RP Zhang, WG (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Northeast Inst Geog & Agroecol, Key Lab Wetland Ecol & Environm, Changchun 130102, Peoples R China.
EM zhangwenguang@iga.ac.cn
RI Wang, wenjuan/HIR-3631-2022; Jiang, Mingliang/GXG-4039-2022
FU National Science Foundation of China [NSFC41371193, NSFC41101091,
   NSFC41471080]
FX The study was supported by the National Science Foundation of China
   (NSFC41371193, NSFC41101091, and NSFC41471080).
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NR 54
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 56
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI WIEN
PA SACHSENPLATZ 4-6, PO BOX 89, A-1201 WIEN, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 141
IS 1-2
BP 31
EP 41
DI 10.1007/s00704-020-03158-8
EA MAR 2020
PG 11
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA MG0XE
UT WOS:000521069300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Jegede, AO
   Addaney, M
   Mokoena, UC
AF Jegede, Ademola Oluborode
   Addaney, Michael
   Mokoena, Untalimile Crystal
BE Filho, WL
   Jacob, D
TI Climate Change Risk and Insurance as an Adaptation Strategy: An Enquiry
   into the Regulatory Framework of South Africa and Ghana
SO HANDBOOK OF CLIMATE SERVICES
SE Climate Change Management
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID PRIVATE; GOVERNANCE; RESPONSES; INSURERS; CITIES
AB Climate change and its environmental, social and economic impacts continue to pose sustainability challenges for governments, organizations and individuals around the world. With Africa identified as one of the most vulnerable regions, adaptation to adverse effects of climate change has been recognised as increasingly necessary. Adaptation policies have therefore been developed by most African countries; where some countries have adopted targeted adaptation strategies while others have introduced more general policy initiatives. Insurance is a vital part of a comprehensive set of responses targeted at adapting to future climate change. Insurance, as argued, can provide resources needed to rebuild societies after experiencing adverse effects of extreme weather events, and can do so in ways that promote preventive, risk-reducing action. However, the extent of involvement of the insurance sector and adoption of climate insurance policies depends on the national regulatory frameworks governing adaptation. With a particular focus on South Africa and Ghana, this chapter links climate change risk to the potential of insurance as an adaptation strategy. It then interrogates the extent to which the regulatory environment can be harnessed in support of insurance as a climate change adaptation strategy in South Africa and Ghana.
C1 [Addaney, Michael] Wuhan Univ, Res Inst Environm Law, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
   [Jegede, Ademola Oluborode; Mokoena, Untalimile Crystal] Univ Venda, Dept Publ Law, Thohoyandou, South Africa.
C3 Wuhan University; University of Venda
RP Addaney, M (corresponding author), Wuhan Univ, Res Inst Environm Law, Wuhan, Peoples R China.
EM appl.adm@gmail.com
RI Addaney, Michael/AAT-4157-2021
OI Addaney, Michael/0000-0003-4351-1241; Mokoena, Untalimile
   Crystal/0000-0002-7300-5537; Jegede, Ademola
   Oluborode/0000-0003-2887-3623
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NR 72
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 6
PU SPRINGER INTERNATIONAL PUBLISHING AG
PI CHAM
PA GEWERBESTRASSE 11, CHAM, CH-6330, SWITZERLAND
SN 1610-2010
BN 978-3-030-36875-3; 978-3-030-36874-6
J9 CLIM CHANG MANAG
PY 2020
BP 279
EP 294
DI 10.1007/978-3-030-36875-3_14
D2 10.1007/978-3-030-36875-3
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA BR8WF
UT WOS:000674456500015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mell, I
   Clement, S
AF Mell, Ian
   Clement, Sarah
TI Progressing Green Infrastructure planning: understanding its scalar,
   temporal, geo-spatial and disciplinary evolution
SO IMPACT ASSESSMENT AND PROJECT APPRAISAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Green infrastructure; discourse coalitions; advocacy; consensus;
   terminology
ID ENVIRONMENTAL-IMPACT ASSESSMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LIFE-CYCLE
   ASSESSMENT; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; SUSTAINABILITY ASSESSMENT; URBAN;
   MANAGEMENT; GOVERNANCE; POLICY; SPACE
AB Growing recognition has developed between policy-makers and practitioners that green infrastructure (GI) provides an approach to planning for effectively integrating ecosystems, biodiversity, socio-economic and political factors into a coherent framework for environmental management. While there has been progressive development of the concept, a deeper analysis demonstrates that this process has been disjointed. We identify four factors or 'axes' related to: temporal, geographic, scalar and disciplinary variation, which have shaped how GI is promoted and implemented. This paper traces coalescence and divergence across GI planning, using these four axes to map the concept's development. It also questions whether the lack of alignment between GI research and Impact Assessment (IA) is grounded in existing disciplinary mentalities or related to governance or geographical variation. From this analysis, we identify that these factors interact with socio-political and economic drivers shaping the terminology used, but this is not translated into effective evaluative practice. Although flexibility is one of the main strengths of GI, we argue that some degree of harmonisation will help advance the use of GI in environmental planning and assessment.
C1 [Mell, Ian] Univ Manchester, Sch Environm Educ & Dev SEEDS, Humanities Bridgeford St, Manchester M13 9P, Lancs, England.
   [Clement, Sarah] Univ Liverpool, Sch Environm Sci, Dept Geog & Planning, Liverpool, Merseyside, England.
C3 University of Manchester; University of Liverpool
RP Mell, I (corresponding author), Univ Manchester, Sch Environm Educ & Dev SEEDS, Humanities Bridgeford St, Manchester M13 9P, Lancs, England.
EM ian.mell@manchester.ac.uk
RI Clement, Sarah/O-9997-2016
OI Clement, Sarah/0000-0002-5422-622X; Mell, Ian/0000-0002-0544-0836
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NR 130
TC 34
Z9 36
U1 1
U2 33
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1461-5517
EI 1471-5465
J9 IMPACT ASSESS PROJ A
JI Impact Assess. Proj. Apprais.
PD NOV 1
PY 2020
VL 38
IS 6
BP 449
EP 463
DI 10.1080/14615517.2019.1617517
EA MAY 2019
PG 15
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA PG4CM
UT WOS:000469544300001
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Faldi, G
   Macchi, S
AF Faldi, Giuseppe
   Macchi, Silvia
BE Tiepolo, M
   Pezzoli, A
   Tarchiani, V
TI Knowledge for Transformational Adaptation Planning: Comparing the
   Potential of Forecasting and Backcasting Methods for Assessing People's
   Vulnerability
SO RENEWING LOCAL PLANNING TO FACE CLIMATE CHANGE IN THE TROPICS
SE Green Energy and Technology
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Transformational adaptation; Vulnerability; Backcasting; Forecasting;
   Dar es salaam
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; FUTURE; TRANSITIONS
AB In recent years there has been growing recognition that people's vulnerability is not just as an outcome of possible climate impacts, but rather a dynamic contextual characteristic of a socio-ecological system. Accordingly, along with the acknowledgement of the close connection between climate change adaptation and sustainable development, the scientific debate on adaptation has increasingly focused on the issue of transformation of current systems in response to a changing environment. The need for transformational adaptation, especially in high vulnerability contexts, induces planners to broaden and diversify both knowledge and methods to deal with the growing uncertainty and complexity of socio-ecological systems. By focusing on future studies, this chapter aims to explore the transformational knowledge contribution of forecasting and participatory backcasting methods in assessing people's vulnerability using the case study of coastal Dar es Salaam (Tanzania). Participatory backcasting helps understanding contextual vulnerability and community aspirations, and defining shared adaptation goals and action. Conversely, forecasting proves to be fundamental for the identification of boundary conditions and system thresholds relevant to a specific problem, thus providing knowledge that is valuable for integrating global and local perspectives.
C1 [Faldi, Giuseppe; Macchi, Silvia] Sapienza Univ Rome, DICEA Dept Civil Construct & Environm Engn, Via Eudossiana 18, I-00184 Rome, Italy.
C3 Sapienza University Rome
RP Faldi, G (corresponding author), Sapienza Univ Rome, DICEA Dept Civil Construct & Environm Engn, Via Eudossiana 18, I-00184 Rome, Italy.
EM giuseppe.faldi@yahoo.com
OI Faldi, Giuseppe/0000-0001-9211-1450
CR [Anonymous], UNDERSTANDING POLICY
   [Anonymous], ANAL SENSITIVITY SEA
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   [Anonymous], TANZ DAR SAL CIT PRO
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NR 44
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 0
U2 0
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10013, UNITED STATES
SN 1865-3529
EI 1865-3537
BN 978-3-319-59096-7; 978-3-319-59095-0
J9 GREEN ENERGY TECHNOL
PY 2017
BP 265
EP 283
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-59096-7_13
D2 10.1007/978-3-319-59096-7
PG 19
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Regional & Urban Planning; Water
   Resources
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH); Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Public Administration; Water
   Resources
GA BJ9WA
UT WOS:000429923400015
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Jiao, X
   Moinuddin, H
AF Jiao, Xi
   Moinuddin, Hasan
TI Operationalizing analysis of micro-level climate change vulnerability
   and adaptive capacity
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE vulnerability; climate change; adaptive capacity; micro level; Southeast
   Asia
ID ADAPTATION; INDICATORS; FRAMEWORK; INDEX
AB This paper explores vulnerability and adaptive capacity of rural communities in Southern Laos, where households are highly dependent on climate-sensitive natural resources and vulnerable to seasonal weather fluctuations. The speed and magnitude of climate-induced changes may seriously challenge their ability to adapt. Participatory group discussions and 271 household surveys in three villages highlight the current level of vulnerability and adaptive capacity towards climatic variability and risks. This paper visualizes three dimensions of the vulnerability framework at two levels using the Community Climate Vulnerability Index and household climate vulnerability cube. Results show that not only poor households are most at risk from climate change challenges, but also those better-off households highly dependent on specialized agricultural production are locally exposed to climate change risks. The majority of vulnerable households are characterized by low adaptive capacity. Floods and drought regularly put the poor under stress, which has led to various coping mechanisms; but capability of applying long-term adaptive strategies remains low among all households. The outcome of the participatory consultation underlines local community preference for an integrated approach to mainstream climate change adaptation into community natural resource management and livelihood improvement that may lead to better adaptive capacity building.
C1 [Jiao, Xi] Univ Copenhagen, Dept Food & Resource Econ, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Moinuddin, Hasan] Management Consultant, GMS Environm Operat Ctr, Bangkok, Thailand.
C3 University of Copenhagen
RP Jiao, X (corresponding author), Univ Copenhagen, Dept Food & Resource Econ, Copenhagen, Denmark.
EM xj@ifro.ku.dk
FU Government of Sweden; Government of Finland; PR China's Poverty
   Reduction Fund; Government of the Netherlands; European Commission
FX The Asian Development Bank's GMS Core Environment Program and
   Biodiversity Conservation Corridors Initiative supported by the
   Governments of Sweden, Finland, the Netherlands and the PR China's
   Poverty Reduction Fund must be thanked for the financial assistance in
   carrying out this study as part of its Activity on: "Climate Change
   Impacts, Vulnerability, and Adaptation in Agriculture Areas in BCI Pilot
   Sites". The authors also appreciate assistance provided by Madame
   Keobang A of the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE)
   in Lao PDR, Mr Sodxay of the Provincial Natural Resources Office in
   Pakse, Ms Sayfah and Mr Thanongkham of MONRE, Mr Anouxay and Mr Saykham
   from the National University of Laos. Above all, the villagers and
   district officials in Pathoumphone must be thanked, who generously gave
   their time for participatory consultations and household surveys. We
   would also like to thank Anja Byg, Carsten Smith-Hall, Edmond Dounias,
   Han van Dijk and two anonymous reviewers for their valuable and
   insightful comments and suggestions on earlier drafts, and the European
   Commission for the generous support under the Erasmus Mundus Joint
   Doctorate (EMJD) Programme Forest and Nature for Society (FONASO).
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NR 35
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 3
U2 35
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD JAN 1
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 1
BP 45
EP 57
DI 10.1080/17565529.2014.989191
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DG4JI
UT WOS:000372038100004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ford, JD
   Berrang-Ford, L
   Bunce, A
   McKay, C
   Irwin, M
   Pearce, T
AF Ford, James D.
   Berrang-Ford, Lea
   Bunce, Anna
   McKay, Courtney
   Irwin, Maya
   Pearce, Tristan
TI The status of climate change adaptation in Africa and Asia
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Adaptation tracking; Africa; Asia; Hotspot
   regions
ID DEVELOPED-COUNTRIES; EXPERT VIEWS; LESSONS
AB Adaptation is a key component of climate policy, yet we have limited and fragmented understanding of if and how adaptation is currently taking place. In this paper, we document and characterize the current status of adaptation in 47 vulnerable 'hotspot' nations in Asia and Africa, based on a systematic review of the peer-reviewed and grey literature, as well as policy documents, to extract evidence of adaptation initiatives. In total, 100 peer-reviewed articles, 161 grey literature documents, and 27 United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change National Communications were reviewed, constituting 760 adaptation initiatives. Results indicate a significant increase in reported adaptations since 2006. Adaptations are primarily being reported from African and low-income countries, particularly those nations receiving adaptation funds, involve a combination of groundwork and more concrete adaptations to reduce vulnerability, and are primarily being driven by national governments, NGOs, and international institutions, with minimal involvement of lower levels of government or collaboration across nations. Gaps in our knowledge of adaptation policy and practice are particularly notable in North Africa and Central Asia, and there is limited evidence of adaptation initiatives being targeted at vulnerable populations including socioeconomically disadvantaged populations, children, indigenous peoples, and the elderly.
C1 [Ford, James D.; Berrang-Ford, Lea; Bunce, Anna; McKay, Courtney; Irwin, Maya] McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Pearce, Tristan] Univ Sunshine Coast, Sustainabil Res Ctr, Sunshine Coast, Australia.
C3 McGill University; University of the Sunshine Coast
RP Ford, JD (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
EM James.ford@mcgill.ca
RI Ford, Lea/H-5965-2013; Pearce, Tristan/L-9139-2019; Ford,
   James/A-4284-2013
OI Ford, James/0000-0002-2066-3456
FU CARIAA program of the International Development Research Centre (IDRC);
   UK Department for International Development (DFID)
FX This work was supported by the CARIAA program of the International
   Development Research Centre (IDRC) and the UK Department for
   International Development (DFID). Thanks to two anonymous reviewers who
   provided detailed and constructive feedback.
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NR 64
TC 111
Z9 111
U1 2
U2 59
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2015
VL 15
IS 5
SI SI
BP 801
EP 814
DI 10.1007/s10113-014-0648-2
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CI0CY
UT WOS:000354404600005
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Frank, S
   Fürst, C
   Pietzsch, F
AF Frank, Susanne
   Fuerst, Christine
   Pietzsch, Frank
TI Cross-Sectoral Resource Management: How Forest Management Alternatives
   Affect the Provision of Biomass and Other Ecosystem Services
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
ID DECISION-SUPPORT-SYSTEM; SHORT-ROTATION COPPICE; LAND-USE; RENEWABLE
   ENERGY; TRADE-OFFS; CO2 EMISSIONS; LANDSCAPE; AGRICULTURE; METHODOLOGY;
   MODELS
AB Integrated forest management is faced with the challenge that the contribution of forests to economic and ecological planning targets must be assessed in a socio-ecological system context. This paper introduces a way to model spatio-temporal dynamics of biomass production at a regional scale in order to derive land use strategies that enhance biomass provision and avoid trade-offs for other ecosystem services. The software platform GISCAME was employed to bridge the gap between local land management decisions and regional planning by linking growth and yield models with an integrative mesoscale modeling and assessment approach. The model region is located in Saxony, Germany. Five scenarios were simulated, which aimed at testing different alternatives for adapted land use in the context of climate change and increasing biomass demand. The results showed, for example, that forest conversion towards climate-change-adapted forest types had positive effects on ecological integrity and landscape aesthetics. In contrast, negative impacts on landscape aesthetics must be expected if agricultural sites were converted into short rotation coppices. Uncertainties with stem from assumptions regarding growth and yield models were discussed. Future developmental steps which consider, for example, accessibility of the resources were identified.
C1 [Frank, Susanne; Fuerst, Christine] Univ Bonn, Res Dev Ctr, Dept Ecol & Nat Resources Management, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Pietzsch, Frank] PiSolution GmbH, D-04416 Markkleeberg, Germany.
C3 University of Bonn
RP Frank, S (corresponding author), Univ Bonn, Res Dev Ctr, Dept Ecol & Nat Resources Management, Walter Flex Str 3, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
EM Susanne.Frank@uni-bonn.de; Susanne.Frank@uni-bonn.de; fp@pisolution.de
RI Fürst, Christine/H-8682-2012
FU German Federal Ministry of Food, Agriculture and Consumer Protection
   [22019911(11NF199)]
FX The authors are grateful to the public state forest enterprise
   Sachsenforst for making the forest inventory data available. Many thanks
   also to the regional stakeholders for the valuable input regarding the
   functionalities and demands for the presented integrated landscape
   assessment approach. The project RegioPower is funded in the ERA-Net
   program Bioenergy/WoodWisdom by the German Federal Ministry of Food,
   Agriculture and Consumer Protection, funding reference number
   22019911(11NF199).
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NR 72
TC 33
Z9 37
U1 0
U2 46
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD MAR
PY 2015
VL 6
IS 3
BP 533
EP 560
DI 10.3390/f6030533
PG 28
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA CE5IA
UT WOS:000351863600001
OA Green Published, Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cone, J
   Rowe, S
   Borberg, J
   Stancioff, E
   Doore, B
   Grant, K
AF Cone, Joseph
   Rowe, Shawn
   Borberg, Jenna
   Stancioff, Esperanza
   Doore, Brian
   Grant, Kristen
TI Reframing Engagement Methods for Climate Change Adaptation
SO COASTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; dialogic engagement; mental models; science
   communication
ID COMMUNICATION; SCIENCE; KNOWLEDGE; INFORMATION; TOOL
AB Climate change poses known and unknown risks for coastal communities and also challenges for university faculty and local government staff who communicate about cli- mate sciences. Conceived as a way to move beyond traditional models of science communication, this project involved public and private decision makers in specific at-risk communities in Oregon (U.S. Pacific coast) and Maine (Atlantic coast). Both state projects sought to move behavior toward decisive action that results in coastal communities that are more resilient to climate variability at all scales. To promote engagement between project staffs and publics, a dialogic model of communication was advanced, beginning with interviews and focus groups that in turn shaped further engagement through workshops and targeted video products. This means of communication led to a deeper understanding of participants' knowledge, beliefs, perceptions, values, and barriers to action related to climate change and its effects. Coinciding with this, project participant evaluations in both Oregon and Maine indicate that the workshops and videos were successful at informing them on this complex issue; and in both states, project participation led to action outcomes. We believe that applied elsewhere our multifaceted and adaptive approach will garner similar results, provided sufficient dedicated staffing and attention to methods.
C1 [Cone, Joseph; Rowe, Shawn; Borberg, Jenna] Oregon State Univ, Oregon Sea Grant, Corvallis, OR 97331 USA.
   [Stancioff, Esperanza; Grant, Kristen] Univ Maine Cooperat Extens, Orono, ME USA.
   [Stancioff, Esperanza; Grant, Kristen] Univ Maine, Maine Sea Grant, Orono, ME USA.
   [Doore, Brian] Univ Maine, Ctr Res & Evaluat, Orono, ME USA.
C3 Oregon State University; University of Maine System; University of Maine
   Orono; University of Maine System; University of Maine Orono; University
   of Maine System; University of Maine Orono
RP Cone, J (corresponding author), Oregon Sea Grant, 1600 SW Western Blvd, Corvallis, OR 97333 USA.
EM joe.cone@oregonstate.edu
RI Rowe, Shawn/AAQ-5304-2020
OI Rowe, Shawn/0000-0003-2162-0551
FU National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), U.S. Department
   of Commerce [NA06OAR4170010, M/A-21, NA10OAR4170059, A/ESG-7, R/CC-14,
   NA07OAR4310408];  [NA06OAR4170108];  [NA10OAR4170081]
FX The authors gratefully acknowledge our other university collaborators in
   this project: Patrick Corcoran and Michael Harte, Oregon Sea Grant; and
   Joy Irby and Kirsten Winters, graduate students, Oregon State
   University. We also acknowledge helpful comments from two anonymous
   reviewers of this article. This report was prepared by Oregon Sea Grant
   under awards NA06OAR4170010 (project M/A-21), NA10OAR4170059 (project
   numbers M/A-21, A/ESG-7, and R/CC-14), and NA07OAR4310408 from the
   National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), U.S. Department
   of Commerce, and by appropriations made by the Oregon State Legislature.
   Maine Sea Grant's participation was under awards NA06OAR4170108 and
   NA10OAR4170081. The statements, findings, conclusions, and
   recommendations are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
   the views of NOAA, the U. S. Department of Commerce, or the Oregon
   Legislature.
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NR 52
TC 17
Z9 22
U1 2
U2 65
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 0892-0753
EI 1521-0421
J9 COAST MANAGE
JI Coast. Manage.
PD JUL 4
PY 2013
VL 41
IS 4
BP 345
EP 360
DI 10.1080/08920753.2013.803926
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 174UA
UT WOS:000321179700004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Foster, S
   MacDonald, A
AF Foster, Stephen
   MacDonald, Alan
TI The 'water security' dialogue: why it needs to be better informed about
   groundwater
SO HYDROGEOLOGY JOURNAL
LA English
DT Article
DE Water-supply security; Aquifer storage; Groundwater resilience; Climate
   change; Climate adaptation
ID AFRICA; HYDROGEOLOGY; RESILIENCE; SCARCITY; SOUTHERN; DROUGHT
C1 [Foster, Stephen] IAH, Reading RG8 6BJ, Berks, England.
   [MacDonald, Alan] British Geol Survey, Edinburgh EH9 3LA, Midlothian, Scotland.
C3 UK Research & Innovation (UKRI); Biotechnology and Biological Sciences
   Research Council (BBSRC); Pirbright Institute; UK Research & Innovation
   (UKRI); Natural Environment Research Council (NERC); NERC British
   Geological Survey
RP Foster, S (corresponding author), IAH, POB 4130, Reading RG8 6BJ, Berks, England.
EM GWMATEfoster@aol.com; amm@bgs.ac.uk
RI MacDonald, Alan/A-8264-2013
OI Foster, Stephen/0000-0002-0056-555X; MacDonald, Alan/0000-0001-6636-1499
FU UK Department for International Development; NERC [bgs05007] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX This article is published by permission of the Executive Director of the
   British Geological Survey (NERC), and the Global Water Partnership
   (GWP), for whom Stephen Foster is a senior adviser. It is based in part
   on work funded by the UK Department for International Development, but
   the views expressed are those of the authors alone. The article has been
   substantially improved by the constructive comments of Hydrogeology
   Journal reviewers, Paul Seward and William Alley. Sincere thanks are
   also due to Roger Calow, Richard Taylor, Helen Bonsor and Guy Howard for
   many stimulating discussions, and to Mohammed Ait-Kadi (GWP-TEC Chair)
   for encouragement to analyse the topic.
CR AIT-KADI Mohamed., 2012, Increasing Water Security - A Development Imperative
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NR 29
TC 53
Z9 57
U1 0
U2 42
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 1431-2174
EI 1435-0157
J9 HYDROGEOL J
JI Hydrogeol. J.
PD NOV
PY 2014
VL 22
IS 7
BP 1489
EP 1492
DI 10.1007/s10040-014-1157-6
PG 4
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Water Resources
GA AS1RE
UT WOS:000344057300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adams, BT
   Royo, AA
   Kern, CC
   Bronson, DR
   Matthews, SN
   Gougherty, AV
   Prasad, AM
   Iverson, LR
   Rehm, EM
   Raymond, P
   Perie, C
   Miesel, JR
   Mcgraw, AM
AF Adams, Bryce T.
   Royo, Alejandro A.
   Kern, Christel C.
   Bronson, Dustin R.
   Matthews, Stephen N.
   Gougherty, Andrew V.
   Prasad, Anantha M.
   Iverson, Louis R.
   Rehm, Evan M.
   Raymond, Patricia
   Perie, Catherine
   Miesel, Jessica R.
   Mcgraw, Amanda M.
TI Identifying climatically-compatible seedlots for the eastern US:
   building the predictive tools and knowledge to enable forest assisted
   migration
SO FRONTIERS IN FORESTS AND GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE forest assisted migration; climatically-compatible seedlot; climate
   analog; adaptive silviculture; climate change
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; NORTH-AMERICA; ADAPTATION; RESPONSES; GENETICS
AB Introduction Global climate change and associated stressors threaten forest ecosystems due to the rapid pace of climate change, which could exceed the natural migration rate of some tree species. In response, there is growing interest to research and implement forest assisted migration (FAM). Here, we used a species-independent indicator based on climate analogy, according to the sigma (dis)similarity (sigma d) index, to match planting sites across the eastern US with (future) climatically-compatible seedlots (CCS).Methods We developed CCS for a grid composed of 1 x 1 degrees of latitude and longitude. CCS were based on future climate analogs with <= 2 sigma d analogy to ensure CCS were representative of future climate change. CCS were located for three time periods, 2030's, 2050's, and 2090's and three emissions scenarios (SSP2-4.5, SSP3-7.0, and SSP5-8.5) from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 6 database, using 12 climate variables.Results CCS were identified for the majority of 1 x 1 degrees grids based on the SSP3-7.0 scenario. Approximately 28% of 1 x 1 degrees grid's 2090's projections included future climate novelty. The 2030's, 2050's, and 2090's CCS were located on average 222, 358, and 662 km or 1, 2, and 3 eastern seed zones away from the 1 x 1 degrees grids, respectively. CCS were also located further south-southwest (188-197 degrees). In addition, the average forest cover of CCS was approximately 2%, 5%, and 10% less than that of the 1 x 1 degrees grids.Discussion Our development and synthesis of CCS emphasized four key results: (i) average distances to 2030's and 2050's CCS were similar to seed-transfer guidelines for some tree species, but 2090's CCS exceeded current recommendations; (ii) south-southwesterly locations of CCS aligned with tree species habitat distribution dynamics; (iii) future climate novelty potentially challenges the conceptual basis of FAM if tree species are not adapted to climate change; and (iv) variation in forest cover among CCS presents potential opportunities and challenges due the presence or absence of forestland to source seed. Ultimately, our goal was to locate and synthesize CCS that could enable FAM decision support.
C1 [Adams, Bryce T.; Matthews, Stephen N.; Gougherty, Andrew V.; Prasad, Anantha M.; Iverson, Louis R.] USDA Forest Serv, Northern Res Stn, Delaware, OH 43015 USA.
   [Royo, Alejandro A.] USDA Forest Serv, Northern Res Stn, Irvine, PA USA.
   [Kern, Christel C.; Bronson, Dustin R.] USDA Forest Serv, Northern Res Stn, Rhinelander, WI USA.
   [Matthews, Stephen N.] Ohio State Univ, Sch Environm & Nat Resources, Columbus, OH USA.
   [Rehm, Evan M.] USDA Forest Serv, Northern Res Stn, Morgantown, WV USA.
   [Raymond, Patricia; Perie, Catherine] Minist Ressources Nat & Forets, Direct Rech Forestiere, Quebec City, PQ, Canada.
   [Miesel, Jessica R.] Univ Idaho, Dept Forest Rangeland & Fire Sci, Moscow, ID USA.
   [Mcgraw, Amanda M.] WISCONSIN DEPT NAT RESOURCES, Div Forestry, RHINELANDER, WI USA.
C3 United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States Forest
   Service; United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States
   Forest Service; United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United
   States Forest Service; University System of Ohio; Ohio State University;
   United States Department of Agriculture (USDA); United States Forest
   Service; University of Idaho
RP Adams, BT (corresponding author), USDA Forest Serv, Northern Res Stn, Delaware, OH 43015 USA.
EM bryce.adams@usda.gov
FU Northern Research Station10.13039/100014511; Wisconsin Department of
   Natural Resources
FX The authors wish to thank Carolyn Pike for helpful feedback and
   suggestions on the manuscript. We would also like to thank Tyler
   Refsland and Paula Marquardt for contributions toward the development of
   ideas presented in the manuscript. We wish to thank our home
   institutions for support. In addition, we would like to thank Wisconsin
   Department of Natural Resources for their support. Finally, we
   appreciate the feedback provided by two reviewers that improved this
   manuscript.
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NR 84
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 1
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-893X
J9 FRONT FOR GLOB CHANG
JI Front. For. Glob. Change
PD NOV 20
PY 2024
VL 7
AR 1449340
DI 10.3389/ffgc.2024.1449340
PG 17
WC Ecology; Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Forestry
GA O2I2N
UT WOS:001369424200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alilla, R
   Capitanio, F
   De Natale, F
   Parisse, B
   Pontrandolfi, A
AF Alilla, Roberta
   Capitanio, Fabian
   De Natale, Flora
   Parisse, Barbara
   Pontrandolfi, Antonella
TI An agro-meteorological hazard analysis for risk management in a
   Mediterranean area: a case study in Southern Italy (Campania Region)
SO THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; DAILY TEMPERATURE; TREND ANALYSIS; EXTREME INDEXES;
   PRECIPITATION; POLICIES; PROGRESS; QUALITY; IMPACT; SPAIN
AB Agriculture is highly dependent on environmental, climate and weather conditions and on extreme weather events leading to natural disasters. Such events are more and more frequent in Italy, and in the last decades huge public investments were dedicated to risk management policies in agriculture. In order to set an adequate weather-related risk assessment, a robust analysis of the hazard is needed, which requires an agro-meteorological approach to detect the potential impacts of weather extremes on agricultural activities. With the aim of assessing the effectiveness of the current risk management policy in catching the main hazards, specific agro-meteorological indices were applied to highlight occurrence, trends, and spatial patterns of extreme events. The analysis was based on reanalysis datasets and focused on a study area in Southern Italy (Campania region) during the 1981-2021 period. The findings are reported in terms of maps and statistics aggregated at administrative unit level (5 provinces) and show a general intensification of weather extremes in the last decades, both in frequency and intensity of the events. The main indications refer to growth rates of heavy precipitation, potentially leading to flood, locally exceeding 3-4 mm/year, an increasing number of months with severe/extreme droughts, mainly concentrated during the growing season. An upward trend was also observed for days with extreme maximum temperatures, which already exceeded or approached 50% between June and September in the 1981-2021 period in most areas. Maximum temperatures above 35 degrees C are becoming more frequent and in the inner areas they were reached in 10 days in the 2021 summer quarter. On the other hand, no significant trends were detected for late frosts. In terms of policy implications, the results seem to suggest that some extreme weather events can no longer be considered as exceptional at the present time and in a trend perspective, making them less suitable to be addressed through the risk management tools based almost exclusively on the strategy of transferring risks (insurances and more recent mutual funds) both for farmers and for the allocation of public resources. Therefore, the need is underlined for improving the design of the risk management policies to increase farms' resilience and adaptation to climate change. Moreover, the study highlights the information potential of agro-meteorological indices in supporting evidence-based decision making in agriculture.
C1 [Alilla, Roberta; De Natale, Flora; Parisse, Barbara; Pontrandolfi, Antonella] Council Agr Res & Econ, Res Ctr Agr & Environm, Via Navicella,2-4, I-00184 Rome, Italy.
   [Capitanio, Fabian] Univ Naples Federico II, Dept Vet Med & Anim Prod, Via Delpino, Naples, Italy.
C3 Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e L'analisi Dell'economia
   Agraria (CREA); University of Naples Federico II
RP Pontrandolfi, A (corresponding author), Council Agr Res & Econ, Res Ctr Agr & Environm, Via Navicella,2-4, I-00184 Rome, Italy.
EM antonella.pontrandolfi@crea.gov.it
RI ALILLA, ROBERTA/JDM-2369-2023; pontrandolfi, antonella/ABC-8503-2020;
   Capitanio, Fabian/E-7806-2011; De Natale, Flora/AAK-1710-2021
OI Parisse, Barbara/0000-0001-5551-7523; Alilla,
   Roberta/0000-0001-7204-9020; Capitanio, Fabian/0000-0003-0327-8019;
   pontrandolfi, antonella/0000-0003-3442-7005; De Natale,
   Flora/0000-0002-1132-9894
FU Regione Campania
FX We wish to thank Antonio Gerardo Pepe for his precious support in data
   management and processing and Eleonora Gerardi for her help in graphic
   editing.
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NR 114
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 10
PU SPRINGER WIEN
PI Vienna
PA Prinz-Eugen-Strasse 8-10, A-1040 Vienna, AUSTRIA
SN 0177-798X
EI 1434-4483
J9 THEOR APPL CLIMATOL
JI Theor. Appl. Climatol.
PD 2024 FEB 10
PY 2024
DI 10.1007/s00704-024-04878-x
EA FEB 2024
PG 18
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA HM5F4
UT WOS:001159928700002
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Önemli, F
   Önemli, G
AF Onemli, Fadul
   Onemli, Gurkan
TI Evaluation of Wild Annual Sunflower Species for Some Morphological,
   Phenological, and Agronomic Characters under Field Conditions*
SO JOURNAL OF TEKIRDAG AGRICULTURE FACULTY-TEKIRDAG ZIRAAT FAKULTESI
   DERGISI
LA English
DT Article
DE Helianthus; Flowering period; Plant height; Seed yield; Seed weight
ID RELATIVES; ACID
AB New gene sources are needed for adaptation to climatic changes, resistance to the regeneration of diseases and pests, and achieving high heterosis in sunflower breeding. Wild species are the most important gene sources for sunflower breeding studies. For breeding studies, it is necessary to know the morphological, Phenological, and agronomic characteristics of these genotypes in field conditions. The aim of this research was to determine these components of annual wild sunflower (Helianthus) species under field conditions in the 2012 and 2013 growing seasons for new gene sources. In this research, H. agrestis, H. annuus (4 different genotypes), H. anomalus, H. argophyllus, H. bolanderi, H. debilis (ssp. debilis, ssp. cucumerifolius, ssp. silvestris, ssp. tardiflorus and ssp. vestitus subspecies), H. deserticola, H. exilis, H. neglectus, H. niveus (ssp. niveus, ssp. canescens and ssp. tephrodes subspecies) H. petiolaris (ssp. petiolaris (2 different genotypes) and ssp. fallax subspecies), H. porteri, and H. praecox (ssp. praecox (2 different genotypes), ssp. hirtus, and ssp. runyani subspecies) were used as material. In this study, determined characters on annual wild sunflower genotypes were plant height, primary branches number, secondary branches number per primary branches, plant spreading diameter, the number of days from planting to first flowering, the number of days from planting to 50 % flowering, the number of days from planting to the end of flowering, the number of days of the flowering period, main stem diameter, head diameter, 1000 seeds weight, and seed yield. Year factor had a significant effect on these characters except plant height. Genotype had a significant effect on all characters in both years except seed width in 2013. In both years, the highest values for seed yield, 100 seed weight, head diameter, and main stem diameter were obtained in wild H. annuus genotypes while H. argophyllus had the highest values for plant height and primary branches number, and the highest days numbers from planting to first and 50% flowering. In the first and second growing seasons; values of the genotypes changed between 61.33 and 325.67 cm for plant height, between 0.73 and 101.20 g for thousand seed weight, between 97 and 223 days for the time from planting to 50% flowering, between 50 and 171 days for the flowering period, between 5.0 and 800.70 units for the number of plant heads, between 1.57 and 233.20 g for plant grain yields.
C1 [Onemli, Fadul] Tekirdag Namik Kemal Univ, Ziraat Fak, Tarla Bitkileri Bolumu, Suleymanpasa, Turkiye.
   [Onemli, Gurkan] Tekirdag Namik Kemal Univ, Fen Bilimleri Enstitusu, Tarla Bitkileri Anabilim Dali, Suleymanpasa, Turkiye.
RP Önemli, F (corresponding author), Tekirdag Namik Kemal Univ, Ziraat Fak, Tarla Bitkileri Bolumu, Suleymanpasa, Turkiye.
EM fonemli@nku.edu.tr; gurkanonemli@hotmail.com
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NR 28
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU UNIV NAMIK KEMAL
PI DEGIRMENALTI-TEKIRDAG
PA UNIV FAC AGRICULTURE, DEGIRMENALTI-TEKIRDAG, 59030, Turkiye
SN 1302-7050
EI 2146-5894
J9 J TEKIRDAG AGR FACUL
JI J. Tekirdag Agric. Fac.
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 20
IS 4
BP 857
EP 870
DI 10.33462/jotaf.1222792
PG 14
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Agriculture
GA C0I7J
UT WOS:001286288200011
OA Green Submitted, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Xu, YQ
   Xiao, FJ
AF Xu, Yuqing
   Xiao, Fengjin
TI Assessing Changes in the Value of Forest Ecosystem Services in Response
   to Climate Change in China
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE ecosystem service values; CASA model; InVEST model; forest; climate
   change; China
ID COVER CHANGE; LAND-USE; IMPACTS; RIVER
AB Ecosystem services are the basis of human survival and development and play an irreplaceable role in maintaining the dynamic balance of the earth's life support system and environment. This study evaluated the annual forest ecosystem service values (ESVs) and their spatial evolution characteristics from 2001 to 2020 in China and revealed the impact of climatic factors as well. The equivalent factor method was applied to calculate ESVs in combination with net primary productivity (NPP) calculated by the CASA model. The water conservation results based on the InVEST model and equivalent factor method were compared to test the reliability of the method. From 2001 to 2020, the annual forest ESVs ranged from RMB 9.17 trillion to 10.81 trillion, with an average of RMB 9.99 trillion in China. The forest ESVs increased from the northwest to the southeast regions of China with the lowest values of less than RMB 3 million per square kilometer and relatively high values of more than RMB 9 million per square kilometer. In the past 20 years, the forest ESVs have shown a significant increasing trend, especially in the Northeast Forest Region and Southeast Forest Region. The ESVs have decreased only in very few forest areas such as Cuona and Motuo counties on the southern edge of Tibet Province in Southwest China and Pingtung and Kaohsiung counties in southern Taiwan. The mean annual forest ESV was necessarily higher in the recent 10 years (2011-2020, RMB 10.43 trillion) than in the previous 10 years (2001-2010, RMB 9.55 trillion), while the spatial growth rate was usually less than 20%. The annual forest ESVs were significantly correlated with temperature, precipitation and evapotranspiration but not with sunshine hours and relative humidity across the 20 years. In most areas (>60%), the positive impact of various climatic factors was dominant, and the area positively affected by precipitation was the largest (76%). The mean annual forest water conservation from 2001 to 2020 was RMB 1.46 trillion based on the InVEST model and was RMB 1.77 trillion based on the equivalent factor method. Overall, the results obtained by the two methods are roughly equal and mostly spatially matched. This study has some guiding significance for utilizing resources rationally, strengthening ecological environment protection and improving adaptability to climate change.
C1 [Xu, Yuqing; Xiao, Fengjin] China Meteorol Adm, Natl Climate Ctr, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China.
C3 China Meteorological Administration
RP Xu, YQ (corresponding author), China Meteorol Adm, Natl Climate Ctr, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China.
EM xuyq@cma.gov.cn; xiaofj@cma.gov.cn
FU National Key Research and Development Plan Program [2020YFE0201900,
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FX This research was funded by the National Key Research and Development
   Plan Program (grant no. 2020YFE0201900 and grant no. 2017YFD0300201).
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NR 79
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 7
U2 55
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD APR
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 8
AR 4773
DI 10.3390/su14084773
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 0T2TN
UT WOS:000786824700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Arce, A
   de Haan, S
   Burra, DD
   Ccanto, R
AF Arce, Alejandra
   de Haan, Stef
   Burra, Dharani D.
   Ccanto, Raul
TI Unearthing Unevenness of Potato Seed Networks in the High Andes: A
   Comparison of Distinct Cultivar Groups and Farmer Types Following
   Seasons With and Without Acute Stress
SO FRONTIERS IN SUSTAINABLE FOOD SYSTEMS
LA English
DT Article
DE smallholder farmers; seed networks; potato diversity; landraces; Andes;
   stress
ID EXCHANGE NETWORKS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SYSTEMS; VULNERABILITY; MANAGEMENT;
   DYNAMICS; MAIZE; INTENSIFICATION; CONSERVATION; STRATEGIES
AB Farmer seed systems are considered pivotal to adaptation to climate change and the on-farm conservation of agrobiodiversity in centers of crop origin. To better understand their distinct role, we conducted a multipronged analysis of potato seed exchange networks in Peru's central Andes distinguishing between cultivar groups and farmer types following cropping seasons with and without acute stress. Cultivar groups involved (i) bred varieties, (ii) commercial floury landraces, (iii) non-commercial floury landraces (single cultivars), (iv) non-commercial floury landraces (mixed cultivars), and (v) bitter landraces. Farmer types involved (i) general farmers, (ii) seed specialists, and (iii) custodian farmers. Documentation of seed acquisition and provision without differentiating between farmers and cultivar groups may not accurately reflect the fine-grained dynamics underlying seed networks. To test this, a semi-structured survey of 336 households was conducted in 2014-2015 to study seed procurement in two research sites. Results confirm that seed networks are uneven and distinct for cultivar groups and farmer types. Commercial floury landraces and bred varieties were dominant when it came to frequency of transactions, volumes and overall availability. Bitter landraces represent an extreme opposite case, being procured infrequently. Non-commercial floury landraces represent an intermediate case as they are regularly procured in comparatively small volumes. The influence of general farmers and traders within seed networks is essential for overall seed access. The role of specialists and custodians is less omnipresent; yet, both fulfill a unique role. Specialists as providers of large volumes of certified seed of commercial floury landraces and bred varieties. Custodians as a source of diverse non-commercial floury landraces. Seed networks did re-organize following seasons with acute seed stress. A notable shift involved a contraction of seed networks within sub-regional clusters. Following stress, the directionality of seed provision vs. acquisition inverted. While average seed volumes acquired per transaction nearly halved, farmers' net seed acquisitions surpassed provisions in response to stress. We suggest that the self-regulatory capacity of farmer seed networks represents a strong safety net through which smallholders can respond to crop failure and seed stress. Seed system interventions aimed at genetic resources conservation or relief should build on these seed networks.
C1 [Arce, Alejandra] Univ Antioquia, Dept Agr Sci, Agroecol Program, Medellin, Colombia.
   [de Haan, Stef] Int Potato Ctr, Global Program Genet Resources, Lima, Peru.
   [de Haan, Stef; Burra, Dharani D.] Int Ctr Trop Agr, Agr Genet Inst, Hanoi, Vietnam.
   [Ccanto, Raul] Grp Yanapai, Concepcion, Junin, Peru.
C3 Universidad de Antioquia; CGIAR; International Potato Center (CIP);
   Alliance; International Center for Tropical Agriculture - CIAT
RP Arce, A (corresponding author), Univ Antioquia, Dept Agr Sci, Agroecol Program, Medellin, Colombia.
EM alearcei@gmail.com
OI Ccanto Retamozo, Raul Carlos/0000-0003-1396-213X; Arce Indacochea,
   Alejandra/0000-0001-8067-8898
FU McKnight Foundation's Collaborative Crop Research Program [09-033];
   International Potato Center (CIP) [1134-CGIA]
FX The McKnight Foundation's Collaborative Crop Research Program
   financially supported this research project under grant number 09-033.
   The International Potato Center (CIP) provided a grant under the project
   number 1134-CGIA (Integrated in-situ conservation strategy and
   methodology) for the main author to conduct her research in Peru.
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NR 100
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 1
U2 6
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2571-581X
J9 FRONT SUSTAIN FOOD S
JI Front. Sustain. Food Syst.
PD JUL 30
PY 2018
VL 2
AR 43
DI 10.3389/fsufs.2018.00043
PG 22
WC Food Science & Technology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Food Science & Technology
GA JU7YU
UT WOS:000501888500001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Quintana, AV
   Mayhew, SH
   Kovats, S
   Gilson, L
AF Quintana, Amanda, V
   Mayhew, Susannah H.
   Kovats, Sari
   Gilson, Lucy
TI A story of (in)coherence: climate adaptation for health in South African
   policies
SO HEALTH POLICY AND PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; health policy; policy analysis
ID PUBLIC-HEALTH; COHERENCE; INTEGRATION
AB Climate adaptation strengthens and builds the resilience of health systems to future climate-related shocks. Adaptation strategies and policies are necessary tools for governments to address the long-term impacts of climate change and enable the health system to respond to current impacts such as extreme weather events. Since 2011 South Africa has national climate change policies and adaptation strategies, yet there is uncertainty about: how these policies and plans are executed; the extent to which health policies include adaptation; and the extent of policy coherence across sectors and governance levels. A policy document analysis was conducted to examine how South African climate change, development and health policy documents reflect the health adaptation response across national and Western Cape levels and to assess the extent of coherence across key health and environment sector policy documents, including elements to respond to health-related climate risks, that can support implementation. Our findings show that overall there is incoherence in South African climate adaptation within health policy documents. Although health adaptation measures are somewhat coherent in national level policies, there is limited coherence within Western Cape provincial level documents and limited discussion on climate adaptation, especially for health. Policies reflect formal decisions and should guide decision-makers and resourcing, and sectoral policies should move beyond mere acknowledgement of adaptation responses to a tailored plan of actions that are institutionalized and location and sector specific. Activities beyond documents also impact the coherence and implementation of climate adaptation for health in South Africa. Clear climate risk-specific documents for the health sector would provide a stronger plan to support the implementation of health adaptation and contribute to building health system's resilience.
C1 [Quintana, Amanda, V; Mayhew, Susannah H.; Kovats, Sari; Gilson, Lucy] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Fac Publ Hlth Policy, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England.
   [Gilson, Lucy] Univ Cape Town, Sch Publ Hlth & Family Med, Div Hlth Policy & Syst, Observ, ZA-7925 Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Quintana, Amanda, V] London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Publ Hlth Environm & Soc, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England.
C3 University of London; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine;
   University of Cape Town; University of London; London School of Hygiene
   & Tropical Medicine
RP Quintana, AV (corresponding author), London Sch Hyg & Trop Med, Publ Hlth Environm & Soc, Keppel St, London WC1E 7HT, England.
EM Amanda.Quintana@lshtm.ac.uk
RI , Susannah/HJP-3632-2023
OI Gilson, Lucy/0000-0002-2775-7703; Quintana, Amanda
   V./0000-0001-8750-2908; Mayhew, Susannah/0000-0002-2433-3809
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NR 40
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 2
U2 2
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS
PI OXFORD
PA GREAT CLARENDON ST, OXFORD OX2 6DP, ENGLAND
SN 0268-1080
EI 1460-2237
J9 HEALTH POLICY PLANN
JI Health Policy Plan.
PD APR 10
PY 2024
VL 39
IS 4
BP 400
EP 411
DI 10.1093/heapol/czae011
EA MAR 2024
PG 12
WC Health Care Sciences & Services; Health Policy & Services
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Health Care Sciences & Services
GA NG8D9
UT WOS:001185678700001
PM 38491988
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ahmed, S
   Kiester, E
AF Ahmed, Saleh
   Kiester, Elizabeth
TI Do gender differences lead to unequal access to climate adaptation
   strategies in an agrarian context? Perceptions from coastal Bangladesh
SO LOCAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptation; coastal Bangladesh; gender differences;
   female-headed farming households; Kalapara
AB While people around the world are increasingly facing various climate-related stresses, women with limited resources in low income developing societies are often at a greater risk largely because of their pre-existing constraints on social, economic, political, and cultural resources and opportunities. In this paper, we investigate how gender differences influence farmers' access to various resources that are critical for local climate adaptation in coastal Bangladesh. As one of the most climate-vulnerable regions in not only the country but the world, coastal Bangladesh is experiencing a significant increase in sea level rise, tropical cyclones, storm surges, coastal flooding, coastal erosions as well as unpredictable rainfall patterns. All of these climate related stresses directly contribute to the region's increasing exposure to saltwater intrusion in coastal lands and freshwater sources. While a majority of the previous research has focused on community-based climate adaptation, there has been limited attention on how gender differences shape local farmers' climate adaptation strategies. Using mixed-methods research, this article highlights the ways in which male-headed and female-headed farming households have differential access to locally available adaptation resources along with associated constraints or opportunities for adaptation and disaster risk reduction strategies vary substantially. Our findings suggest female-headed farms are less likely to sell their farmland or migrate away in search of non-farm income due to normative gendered expectations and socio-cultural restrictions. Therefore, female farmers are forced to pursue in-place farming adaptation strategies with limited external resources while relying on informal social networks for weather and climate information.
C1 [Ahmed, Saleh] Boise State Univ, Sch Publ Serv, Boise, ID 83725 USA.
   [Kiester, Elizabeth] Albright Coll, Sociol, Reading, PA 19612 USA.
C3 Boise State University
RP Ahmed, S (corresponding author), Boise State Univ, Sch Publ Serv, Boise, ID 83725 USA.
EM salehahmed@boisestate.edu
OI Ahmed, Saleh/0000-0002-5064-1389; Kiester, Elizabeth/0009-0008-1851-9157
FU NOAA [NA13OAR4310184]; USAID
FX This research was funded by the NOAA [grant number NA13OAR4310184] for
   the International Research and Applications Project (IRAP), with
   contributions from USAID.
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NR 41
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 1
U2 15
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1354-9839
EI 1469-6711
J9 LOCAL ENVIRON
JI Local Environ.
PD MAY 4
PY 2021
VL 26
IS 5
BP 650
EP 665
DI 10.1080/13549839.2021.1916901
EA APR 2021
PG 16
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Studies;
   Geography; Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology;
   Geography; Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA RX9KJ
UT WOS:000642524800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU vonHedemann, N
   Schultz, CA
AF vonHedemann, Nicolena
   Schultz, Courtney A.
TI US Family Forest Owners' Forest Management for Climate Adaptation:
   Perspectives From Extension and Outreach Specialists
SO FRONTIERS IN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE family forest owners (FFOs); climate adaptation; climate change; forest
   management; extension; boundary organization; governmentality;
   individual adaptation
ID CARBON SEQUESTRATION; UNITED-STATES; LANDOWNERS; PARTICIPATION;
   SUSTAINABILITY; PRINCIPLES; KNOWLEDGE; ATTITUDES; INSIGHTS; POLICY
AB In the United States (US), family forest owners, a group that includes individuals, families, trusts, and estates, are the largest single landowner category, owning approximately one-third of the nation's forests. These landowners' individualized decision-making on forest management has a profound impact on US forest cover and function at both local and regional scales. We sought to understand perceptions among family forest specialists of: climate impacts and adaptation options across different forested US regions; how family forest owners are taking climate adaptation into consideration in their forest management, if at all; and major barriers to more active management for adaptation among family forest owners. We conducted semi-structured interviews with 48 forest experts across the US who work with family forest owners, including extension specialists, state forestry agency employees, and consulting foresters who focus on family forest engagement. Our interviewees shared details on how both climate change impacts and forest management for climate adaptation vary across the US, and they perceived a lack of active forest management by family forest owners. They explained that western forest landowners confronting the imminent threat of catastrophic wildfires are more likely to see a need for active forest management. By contrast, in the east, where most forestland is privately owned, interviewees said that landowners see relatively fewer climate impacts on their forests and less need for forest management to respond to climate change. Perceived barriers to more active family forest management for climate adaptation include the lack of more robust markets for a wide range of forest products, a higher capacity forestry workforce, education and assistance in planning forest management, and addressing the issue of increased parcelization of family forest lands. We situate these perceptions in conversations on the role of boundary organizations in climate adaptation, how individual adaptation occurs, and how governing methods frame adaptation possibilities.
C1 [vonHedemann, Nicolena; Schultz, Courtney A.] Colorado State Univ, Dept Forest & Rangeland Stewardship, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA.
C3 Colorado State University
RP vonHedemann, N (corresponding author), Colorado State Univ, Dept Forest & Rangeland Stewardship, Ft Collins, CO 80523 USA.
EM n.vonhedemann@colostate.edu
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NR 76
TC 8
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 1
PU FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA AVENUE DU TRIBUNAL FEDERAL 34, LAUSANNE, CH-1015, SWITZERLAND
EI 2624-9553
J9 FRONT CLIM
JI Front. Clim.
PD OCT 14
PY 2021
VL 3
AR 674718
DI 10.3389/fclim.2021.674718
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA K8WR9
UT WOS:001019191400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sharma, A
   Kumar, A
   Shankar, V
   Thakur, PK
AF Sharma, Abhishek
   Kumar, Ajay
   Shankar, Vijay
   Thakur, Praveen Kumar
TI Hydrological modeling for rainfall-runoff assessment in a sub-himalayan
   catchment using a distributed MIKE SHE/MIKE+ model
SO WATER PRACTICE AND TECHNOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE gambhar catchment; MIKE SHE model; rainfall-runoff; sensitivity
   analysis; validation
ID SENSITIVITY-ANALYSIS; SHE MODEL; WATER; CALIBRATION; VALIDATION;
   SIMULATION; STREAMFLOW; PARAMETERIZATION; SYSTEM
AB The management of water resources, including flood forecasting, infrastructure planning, environmental preservations, and climate change adaptation, depends highly on accurate assessment of rainfall-runoff processes. In the present study, a distributed hydrological model has been developed using MIKE System Hydrological European coupled with MIKE+ approach for the Gambhar catchment located in the northwest Himalayas, India. For model development, the hydrometeorological data i.e., precipitation, land use land cover, evapotranspiration, and soil types for the duration 2010 to 2018 have been acquired, while observed daily streamflow data of the Gambhar River has been used for calibration and validation purposes. The model's performance has been evaluated using statistical indicators i.e., mean average error (MAE), root mean square error (RMSE), Nash-Sutcliffe Efficiency (NSE), scatter index (SI) and coefficient of determination (R2), and found to be 65.43, 283.5, 0.80, 0.08, and 0.85, respectively during validation indicating a strong correlation between predicted and observed streamflow. The sensitivity analysis of the model infers that the rainfall and canopy intercept parameters are major controlling factors in the runoff generation. The findings of the study are beneficial for hydrologists and water resources managers.
C1 [Sharma, Abhishek; Kumar, Ajay; Shankar, Vijay] NIT, Dept Civil Engn, Hamirpur, Himachal Prades, India.
   [Thakur, Praveen Kumar] IIRS, SG Water Resources Dept, Dehra Dun, Uttarakhand, India.
C3 National Institute of Technology (NIT System); National Institute of
   Technology Hamirpur; Department of Space (DoS), Government of India;
   Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO); Indian Institute of Remote
   Sensing (IIRS)
RP Sharma, A (corresponding author), NIT, Dept Civil Engn, Hamirpur, Himachal Prades, India.
EM abhiin.sharma@gmail.com
RI Shankar, Vijay/ABA-2948-2021; Sharma, Abhishek/S-8492-2019
OI SHARMA, ABHISHEK/0009-0009-1681-7289
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NR 42
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 2
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
EI 1751-231X
J9 WATER PRACT TECHNOL
JI Water Pract. Technol.
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 19
IS 7
BP 2929
EP 2943
DI 10.2166/wpt.2024.158
EA JUN 2024
PG 15
WC Water Resources
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Water Resources
GA A2Q5R
UT WOS:001248507700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Luyts, J
   Burnay, N
   Piguet, E
   Fall, A
   Mballo, I
   De Longueville, F
   Henry, S
AF Luyts, Jelena
   Burnay, Nathalie
   Piguet, Etienne
   Fall, Arona
   Mballo, Issa
   De Longueville, Florence
   Henry, Sabine
TI Structured timeline mapping as a data collection methodology: a new
   perspective for research on environmental adaptation
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Temporality; data collection methodology; adaptation; environmental
   change; northern Senegal
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; CHANGE VULNERABILITY; OUT-MIGRATION;
   INTERVIEWS; RESILIENCE; MEMORY; IMPACT; YIELD
AB The process of adaptation is dynamic and involves a temporal component. However, conventional methods of data collection have mostly been used in research on environmental adaptations and provide a rather static view. The structured timeline mapping method presented here is grounded in social sciences, designed for the West African environment, and constructed to capture time. The different steps for its construction and implementation are outlined along with the underlying reasoning that led to the choices made. It appears both respondents and interviewers benefit from this method since the recall process is facilitated for the first and the visual support gives a global view of the interview at all stages for the latter. Additionally, this methodology offers four major benefits. First, temporality is the central information collected, with both the timing and the duration of the elements. Second, this approach enables the observation of linkages and interrelations between adaptations or between adaptations and perceived changes in the environment. Third, the participants can self-reflect on their situation and bring elements to the analysis. Lastly, structured timeline mapping results in a more holistic view of the respondent's adaptation journey. Therefore, this data collection methodology provides a complementary view of the adaptation journey.
C1 [Luyts, Jelena; De Longueville, Florence; Henry, Sabine] Univ Namur, Dept Geog, Rue Bruxelles 61, B-5000 Namur, Belgium.
   [Luyts, Jelena; De Longueville, Florence; Henry, Sabine] Univ Namur, Inst Life Earth & Environm ILEE, Namur, Belgium.
   [Burnay, Nathalie] Univ Namur, Dept Polit Social & Commun Sci, Namur, Belgium.
   [Burnay, Nathalie] Univ Namur, Transit Inst, Namur, Belgium.
   [Burnay, Nathalie] UCL, Hist Soc IACCHOS, Inst Anal Change Contemporary, Louvain La Neuve, Belgium.
   [Piguet, Etienne; Mballo, Issa] Univ Neuchatel, Dept Geog, Neuchatel, Switzerland.
   [Fall, Arona] GIE Ecogarde Parc Natl Langue Barbarie, St Louis, Senegal.
C3 University of Namur; University of Namur; University of Namur;
   University of Namur; Universite Catholique Louvain; University of
   Neuchatel
RP Luyts, J (corresponding author), Univ Namur, Dept Geog, Rue Bruxelles 61, B-5000 Namur, Belgium.
EM jelena.luyts@unamur.be
RI Piguet, Etienne/AAE-7426-2019
OI Burnay, Nathalie/0000-0003-1819-3405; Luyts, Jelena/0000-0002-3035-9562;
   Henry, Sabine/0000-0002-7496-6313
FU Fonds De La Recherche Scientifique - FNRS10.13039/501100002661
FX No Statement Available
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NR 62
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 1
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD 2024 MAY 3
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/17565529.2024.2347362
EA MAY 2024
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA PM3F5
UT WOS:001214449800001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Han, Z
   Youn, YC
   Kim, S
   Choe, H
AF Han, Zhiying
   Youn, Yeo-Chang
   Kim, Seunguk
   Choe, Hyeyeong
TI Improving Farmer Livelihood Resilience to Climate Change in Rural Areas
   of Inner Mongolia, China
SO AGRICULTURE-BASEL
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; livelihood resilience; livelihood types;
   surrounding land uses
ID ADAPTATION; TRANSFORMABILITY; VULNERABILITY; COMMUNITIES; STRATEGIES;
   RELOCATION; FRAMEWORK; IMPACT; REGION
AB This study evaluates how resilient farmers' livelihoods are to climate change and what factors influence this resilience. To measure resilience, we constructed an indicator system based on the livelihood resilience analysis framework. We surveyed 42 experts and 630 farmers after a climate change disturbance in Aohan Banner, Inner Mongolia, from August to October 2021, and analyzed these data using the comprehensive index method. Meanwhile, we used a multiple linear regression model to analyze the key factors affecting farmer livelihood resilience across different livelihood types and towns. We found that farmers who primarily worked in agriculture had the highest resilience scores and that livelihood resilience differed by geographical location; specifically, livelihood resilience gradually declines from southern to northern areas and from forest and forest-grassland to grassland locations. The results also show that education level, agricultural technology training, transportation infrastructure, accessibility of information, awareness of climate change, climate change perception, change in livelihood strategies, family size, and the holding size of the arable area are positively associated with farmer livelihood resilience, while household head age is negatively associated with resilience. We therefore advise that policymakers should diversify agricultural livelihoods, afforest surrounding arable areas, improve transportation infrastructure, increase learning activities and skill training for farmers, and publicize climate change knowledge.
C1 [Han, Zhiying; Youn, Yeo-Chang; Kim, Seunguk; Choe, Hyeyeong] Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Agr Forestry & Bioresources, Coll Agr & Life Sci, 1 Gwanakro, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
   [Youn, Yeo-Chang] Inst Sustainable Social Ecol Syst, Seongsudong 1 Ga, Seoul 04779, South Korea.
   [Choe, Hyeyeong] Seoul Natl Univ, Res Inst Agr & Life Sci, 1 Gwanakro, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
C3 Seoul National University (SNU); Seoul National University (SNU)
RP Choe, H (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Dept Agr Forestry & Bioresources, Coll Agr & Life Sci, 1 Gwanakro, Seoul 08826, South Korea.; Choe, H (corresponding author), Seoul Natl Univ, Res Inst Agr & Life Sci, 1 Gwanakro, Seoul 08826, South Korea.
EM hanzhiying@snu.ac.kr; youn@snu.ac.kr; adrenaline@snu.ac.kr;
   hy.choe@snu.ac.kr
RI ; Yeo-Chang, YOUN/F-6089-2010
OI Kim, Seunguk/0009-0008-4381-924X; Yeo-Chang, YOUN/0000-0002-3353-1727;
   Choe, Hyeyeong/0000-0003-2130-1622
FU We extend our gratitude to the 35 experts for generously sharing their
   knowledge with our study. We are also grateful for the dedication of our
   exceptional survey team in collecting the available data. Additionally,
   we would like to express our heartfelt a
FX We extend our gratitude to the 35 experts for generously sharing their
   knowledge with our study. We are also grateful for the dedication of our
   exceptional survey team in collecting the available data. Additionally,
   we would like to express our heartfelt appreciation to Liang Cheng for
   his invaluable assistance in data analysis. Last but not least, we are
   also thankful to all the respondents for their participation in
   completing the questionnaire.
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NR 101
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 10
U2 32
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2077-0472
J9 AGRICULTURE-BASEL
JI Agriculture-Basel
PD OCT
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 10
AR 2030
DI 10.3390/agriculture13102030
PG 19
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA W8BE9
UT WOS:001093816600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ben Kalifa, ML
   VanVolkenburg, H
   Vasseur, L
AF Ben Kalifa, M. L.
   VanVolkenburg, H.
   Vasseur, L.
TI Testing cover crop species under three soil moisture conditions in a
   controlled greenhouse environment
SO CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PLANT SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE legumes; grasses; moisture levels; management; drought; extreme weather
   events
ID ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; DROUGHT; GROWTH; MANAGEMENT; PRODUCTIVITY;
   TOLERANCE; VINEYARDS; STRESS; YIELD; LEAF
AB Extreme climatic events, such as drought and heavy rainfall, are increasing with climate change. These events can threaten agroecosystems, including vineyards. Cover crops are often grown in vineyards for various reasons and can be an effective strategy for climate change adaptation. Understanding which cover crop species can establish well under extreme climate conditions is important. We conducted a greenhouse experiment to investigate the responses of nine cover crop species to overwatered and water-deficit conditions. Treatments included (1) overwatered soil condition, watered at 100% field capacity daily, (2) control, watered at 60%-70% every other day, and (3) water deficit, watered at 15%-20% weekly for 53 growing days. Results indicated that the total dry weight of all species decreased (most significantly) under water-deficit conditions. However, pubescent wheatgrass and red fescue did not exhibit any stress symptoms. Apart from alfalfa, all species established well under overwatered conditions despite slight yellowing of foliage for crimson clover and hairy vetch. Pearl millet and yellow sweet clover had the best establishment regardless of conditions. Our results provide important information on the selection of cover crops that can withstand climatic variability and thrive in the extreme conditions linked to the climate change scenario in Canada.
C1 [Ben Kalifa, M. L.; VanVolkenburg, H.; Vasseur, L.] Brock Univ, Dept Biol Sci, St Catharines, ON, Canada.
C3 Brock University
RP Vasseur, L (corresponding author), Brock Univ, Dept Biol Sci, St Catharines, ON, Canada.
EM lvasseur@brocku.ca
OI Vasseur, Liette/0000-0001-7289-2675
FU ORGANIC SCIENCE CLUSTER 3 (OSC3) : CONNECTING Environmental
   Sustainability and the Science of organic production [15]
FX This research was supported by the ORGANIC SCIENCE CLUSTER 3 (OSC3) :
   CONNECTING Environmental Sustainability and the Science of organic
   production (grant No. 15) .
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NR 71
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 1
PU CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
PI OTTAWA
PA 123 Slater Street, Suite 610, OTTAWA, ON K1P 5H2, CANADA
SN 0008-4220
EI 1918-1833
J9 CAN J PLANT SCI
JI Can. J. Plant Sci.
PD APR
PY 2023
VL 103
IS 2
BP 175
EP 183
DI 10.1139/CJPS-2022-0188
EA JAN 2023
PG 9
WC Agronomy; Plant Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Plant Sciences
GA C6RV1
UT WOS:000942495600001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Weaver, D
   McLennan, CL
   Moyle, B
   Casali, GL
AF Weaver, David
   McLennan, Char-Lee
   Moyle, Brent
   Casali, Gian Luca
TI Early community recommendations for sustainable mega-events: evidence
   from the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games
SO JOURNAL OF SUSTAINABLE TOURISM
LA English
DT Article
DE Mega-events; Olympic Games; recommendations; transformative governance;
   sustainable development goals; stakeholder theory
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; CO-CREATION; RESIDENTS PERCEPTIONS;
   STAKEHOLDER THEORY; TOURISM; SUPPORT; PERSPECTIVE; GOVERNANCE;
   EXPERIENCE; ATTITUDES
AB Recommendations are a high form of community consultation, but rarely solicited in surveys of resident attitudes despite their potential to better inform planning and foster stronger event loyalty in an era of mega-event crisis. This paper innovates by identifying and structuring open-ended recommendations for the 2032 Brisbane Olympic Games from host region residents 10 years prior to that mega-event. From an online survey of 897 respondents, 946 discrete recommendations for event "success" were organised through thematic analysis into high level "event," "community" and "organiser" themes. In the emergent community vision for the Games derived from these themes, host city residents aspire for efficient, affordable, and authentic Games that benefit and involve the host community and learn from the past. The vision's focus on resident self-interest is unsurprising but challenges event organisers to accommodate the interests of multiple stakeholders. The aspiration for a sustainable community, nevertheless, is conducive to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and complements recent IOC reforms and the official 2032 Games Vision which call for greater responsiveness to host community interests. Under a framework of soft transformative governance, facilitating micro-transformations should ensure that marginalised groups are heard and their aspirations integrated into early mega-event planning.
C1 [Weaver, David; McLennan, Char-Lee; Casali, Gian Luca] Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Management, QUT Business Sch, Brisbane, Australia.
   [Moyle, Brent] Griffith Univ, Dept Tourism Sport & Hotel Management, Southport, Australia.
   [Weaver, David] Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Management, QUT Business Sch, Brisbane, Qld 4000, Australia.
C3 Queensland University of Technology (QUT); Griffith University; Griffith
   University - Gold Coast Campus; Queensland University of Technology
   (QUT)
RP Weaver, D (corresponding author), Queensland Univ Technol, Sch Management, QUT Business Sch, Brisbane, Qld 4000, Australia.
EM david.weaver@qut.edu.au
RI Casali, Gian/AAL-8551-2021; McLennan, Char-lee/C-5617-2018
OI Weaver, David/0000-0003-1121-0030; Casali, Gian
   Luca/0000-0002-6889-0615; McLennan, Char-lee/0000-0001-6090-4309
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NR 101
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 2
U2 26
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0966-9582
EI 1747-7646
J9 J SUSTAIN TOUR
JI J. Sustain. Tour.
PD FEB 1
PY 2024
VL 32
IS 2
BP 364
EP 384
DI 10.1080/09669582.2022.2149760
EA NOV 2022
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Hospitality, Leisure, Sport &
   Tourism
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA GJ5L9
UT WOS:000890984500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ahn, Y
   Uejio, CK
AF Ahn, Yoonjung
   Uejio, Christopher K.
TI Modeling air conditioning ownership and availability
SO URBAN CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Zillow; ZTRAX; AC; Heat-related illnesses;
   Extreme heat prevention; Random forest
ID HEAT-RELATED ILLNESS; MORTALITY; VULNERABILITY; HEALTH; LEVEL; CITY
AB In recent years, extreme heat amplified the need for indoor cooling systems. Some local governments started to provide household cooling systems for vulnerable people. However, the lack of local AC prevalence makes equitable AC dissemination more difficult. Therefore, this study developed neighborhood-level AC prevalence information for California (CA), US Properties were on the market from 2018 to 2021 with a unique real estate dataset from Zillow Transaction and Assessment Dataset (ZTRAX). The analysis selected housing attributes with theoretical or empirical linkages to AC access. Data preprocessing imputed missing values with a random forest (RF) analysis. Next, a subsequent multi-class RF estimated the types of household AC ownership (central, other, yes, and none). The RF model showed an overall accuracy of 98% (class-specific accuracies for Central: 98%, None: 96%, Other: 95%, Yes: 99%). Jackknifing revealed the latitude, longitude, heating type or system, elevation, built year, cooling degree days, and building quality exhibited the highest Gini importance values. This study visualized AC prevalence in CA and four counties with major cities: Los Angeles, San Diego, Sacramento, and San Francisco County. This result can be applied to implementing heat prevention measures such as providing household cooling systems, energy subsidies, cooling centers, and increased green space access.
C1 [Ahn, Yoonjung] Univ Colorado, Inst Behav Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
   [Uejio, Christopher K.] Florida State Univ, Dept Geog, Tallahassee, FL 32306 USA.
C3 University of Colorado System; University of Colorado Boulder; State
   University System of Florida; Florida State University
RP Ahn, Y (corresponding author), Univ Colorado, Inst Behav Sci, Boulder, CO 80309 USA.
EM Yoonjung.Ahn@colorado.edu
OI Ahn, Yoonjung/0000-0001-6960-8637
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NR 52
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 1
U2 7
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0955
J9 URBAN CLIM
JI Urban CLim.
PD DEC
PY 2022
VL 46
AR 101322
DI 10.1016/j.uclim.2022.101322
EA OCT 2022
PG 14
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 6Z7IX
UT WOS:000897947000004
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bertone, F
   Nicora, G
   Vidal, L
AF Bertone, Fiorela
   Nicora, Gabriela
   Vidal, Luciano
TI Thunderstorm days over Argentina: Integration between human observations
   of thunder and the world wide lightning location network lightning data
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Argentina; lightning; thunder day; thunderstorm
ID SOUTH-AMERICA; CONVECTIVE SYSTEMS; CLIMATOLOGY; HAILSTORM; VARIABILITY;
   PATTERNS; SUMMER; EVENTS; CLOUDS; TREND
AB Storms are one of nature's most dangerous phenomena; therefore, knowing their spatial distribution and evolution over time is of great interest for the protection of society, as well as for climate change adaptation strategies. The measurement of Thunderstorm days (Td) was one of the first tools used to monitor storms. The advent of automatic detection networks on the surface has allowed us to advance in the understanding and characterization of the electrical activity in the atmosphere, locating in real-time electrical discharges and providing information over previously unrecorded regions. This work focuses on the integration of human observations at conventional meteorological stations and the data provided by the WWLLN surface discharge detection network in Argentina. The calibration methodology applied determined a mean human thunderstorm detection radius of 21 km which allowed the elaboration of isokeraunic maps for the period 2008-2017 for the region of interest. The spatial distribution of storms yielded the highest values of Td in the Argentine Northwest region with values above 100 Td center dot year(-1) followed by a relative maximum in the Argentine Northeast with 80 Td center dot year(-1) and the Sierras de Cordoba with 50 Td center dot year(-1).
C1 [Bertone, Fiorela] Serv Meteorol Nacl, Direcc Serv Sectoriales, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
   [Nicora, Gabriela] CITEDEF, DEILAP, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
   [Vidal, Luciano] Serv Meteorol Nacl, Direcc Prod Modelac Ambiental & Sensores Remotos, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
RP Bertone, F (corresponding author), Serv Meteorol Nacl, Direcc Serv Sectoriales, Buenos Aires, DF, Argentina.
EM fiorebertone@gmail.com
OI Bertone, Fiorela/0000-0002-7181-9713; Nicora, M.
   Gabriela/0000-0001-7504-6423
FU GeoRayos II; CITEDEF with the Proyect GeoRayos II WEB [GINKGO 03 NAC
   040/19]; Plataforma de Informacion de Riesgo Medioambiental; Ministerio
   de Defensa [MINDEF PIDDEF 07/18]
FX GeoRayos II and CITEDEF with the Proyect GeoRayos II WEB, Grant/Award
   Number: GINKGO 03 NAC 040/19; Plataforma de Informacion de Riesgo
   Medioambiental; Ministerio de Defensa, Grant/Award Number: MINDEF PIDDEF
   07/18
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NR 65
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 1
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0899-8418
EI 1097-0088
J9 INT J CLIMATOL
JI Int. J. Climatol.
PD DEC 30
PY 2022
VL 42
IS 16
BP 9072
EP 9087
DI 10.1002/joc.7800
EA JUL 2022
PG 16
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 8L9QK
UT WOS:000833869000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zhang, FX
AF Zhang, Fengxiu
TI Not all extreme weather events are equal: Impacts on risk perception and
   adaptation in public transit agencies
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Extreme weather characteristics; Climate change adaptation; Risk
   perception; Organizational response; Multi-hazard context
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; EXPERIENCE; MANAGEMENT; ORGANIZATION; PEOPLE;
   MITIGATION; RESPONSES; PATTERNS; MODEL
AB Prior research widely emphasizes the role of risk perception in motivating proactive adaptation to extreme weather events. This study advances the literature by studying organizational risk perception and adaptation in a multi-hazard context. Instead of treating all weather types indiscriminately, we explicitly consider their unique characteristics and potential distinct effects on risk perception and adaptation in public organizations. The study distills three dimensions along which extreme weather hazards can vary-expected recurrence, impact dispersion, and rate of onset-and theorizes their relationship with organizational risk perception and response. The empirical analysis uses a national two-wave survey on the U.S. largest transit agencies in 2016 and 2019, merged with the National Center for Environmental Information Storm Events Database. We find that extreme weather events are not equal in creating impacts on organizational risk perception and adaptation. Specifically, extreme weather hazards conducive to risk perception and adaptation possess three characteristics: high expected recurrence, widespread impact dispersion, and rapid onset. Meanwhile, the results demonstrate signs of normalizing bias when extreme weather events with all the three characteristics occur at higher frequencies and in moderate intensity. The findings also suggest low sensitivity and overshadowed attention to slow-onset extreme weather events such as extreme heat.
C1 [Zhang, Fengxiu] George Mason Univ, Schar Sch Policy & Govt, Van Metre Hall,3351 Fairfax Dr, Arlington, VA 22201 USA.
C3 George Mason University
RP Zhang, FX (corresponding author), George Mason Univ, Schar Sch Policy & Govt, Van Metre Hall,3351 Fairfax Dr, Arlington, VA 22201 USA.
EM fzhang22@gmu.edu
OI Zhang, Fengxiu/0000-0001-5784-9708
FU Federal Transit Administration, US Department of Transportation
FX This research was made possible through generous support by the Federal
   Transit Administration, US Department of Transportation.
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NR 66
TC 12
Z9 16
U1 5
U2 42
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD MAR
PY 2022
VL 171
IS 1-2
AR 3
DI 10.1007/s10584-022-03323-0
PG 21
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA ZN1HQ
UT WOS:000764794500001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mirzaei, A
   Azarm, H
   Yazdanpanah, M
   Najafabadi, MM
AF Mirzaei, Abbas
   Azarm, Hassan
   Yazdanpanah, Masoud
   Najafabadi, Mostafa Mardani
TI Socio-economic, social-capital, and psychological characteristics and
   climate change adaptive behavior of farmers in Iran
SO CLIMATE RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Adaptive strategies; Social capital; Psychological
   characteristics; Multinomial logit model
ID WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; RISK PERCEPTIONS; WHEAT PRODUCTION; CHANGE IMPACTS;
   ADAPTATION; DROUGHT; ADOPTION; IRRIGATION; POLICY; CHOICE
AB In recent years, climate change in Iran has led to frequent droughts and reduction of available water resources. Iranian farmers are extremely vulnerable to unexpected drought. Despite the undesirable impacts of climate change on their vulnerability, farmers have not sufficiently used adaptive strategies; accordingly, we investigated factors affecting farmers' choice of adaptive strategies to lessen the consequences of climate change in Iran. We propose a framework that covers household, farm, socio-economic, social-capital, and psychological characteristics. Farmers (n = 366) in Fars province, Iran, were selected using a multistage, stratified random sampling method, and data were collected through questionnaires during 2018-2019. Considering the adaptive strategies of changing crop varieties, crop patterns, and irrigation technologies, a multinomial logit model was used. The results showed that off-farm income and access to credit had a significant positive effect on adopting costly and efficient strategies, including changing crop varieties and irrigation technologies. Moreover, our results indicated that when farmers actively participate in social groups, their beliefs and risk perception of climate change become stronger, providing greater incentives to employ adaptive strategies. This study revealed the effective role of social-capital and psychological characteristics in the adaptive behavior of farmers in Iran.
C1 [Mirzaei, Abbas; Najafabadi, Mostafa Mardani] Agr Sci & Nat Resources Univ Khuzestan, Dept Agr Econ, Mollasani 6341773637, Iran.
   [Azarm, Hassan] Shiraz Univ, Dept Agr Econ, Shiraz 7144113131, Iran.
   [Yazdanpanah, Masoud] Agr Sci & Nat Resources Univ Khuzestan, Dept Agr Extens & Educ, Mollasani 6341773637, Iran.
C3 Shiraz University
RP Mirzaei, A (corresponding author), Agr Sci & Nat Resources Univ Khuzestan, Dept Agr Econ, Mollasani 6341773637, Iran.
EM amirzaei@asnrukh.ac.ir
RI Najafabadi, Mostafa/AAU-5752-2021; Yazdanpanah, Masoud/V-5353-2018;
   Azarm, Hassan/AAB-7797-2022
OI Mardani Najafabadi, Mostafa/0000-0001-6181-3505; Azarm,
   Hassan/0000-0002-3329-6579; Mirzaei, Abbas/0000-0003-3161-3099
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NR 96
TC 12
Z9 13
U1 4
U2 30
PU INTER-RESEARCH
PI OLDENDORF LUHE
PA NORDBUNTE 23, D-21385 OLDENDORF LUHE, GERMANY
SN 0936-577X
EI 1616-1572
J9 CLIM RES
JI Clim. Res.
PY 2022
VL 87
BP 1
EP 12
DI 10.3354/cr01683
PG 12
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 0X9ZA
UT WOS:000790056700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hutter, G
   Olfert, A
   Neubert, M
   Ortlepp, R
AF Hutter, Gerard
   Olfert, Alfred
   Neubert, Marco
   Ortlepp, Regine
TI Building Resilience to Natural Hazards at a Local Level in
   Germany-Research Note on Dealing with Tensions at the Interface of
   Science and Practice
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE compromise; disaster risk reduction (DRR); motor of change; setting
   priorities; strategic focus; teleology
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT; EXAMPLES
AB Building resilience is a core element of urban resilience that refers to both the (1) intended physical change of the building stock and the related blue, green, and grey infrastructure, as well as (2) the social process of increasing resilience through the goal-driven cooperation of scientists and practitioners. Building resilience at the interface of science and practice is characterized by tensions and a range of approaches to dealing with tensions. To specify this proposition, this research note adopts a strategic spatial planning perspective and introduces the typology of "motors of change " from organizational and management research. We focus on a goal-driven motor of change ( "teleology ") and highlight three approaches to dealing with tensions: developing a strategic focus of knowledge integration, setting priorities to enhance resilience as a pro-active ability of disaster risk reduction (DRR), and compromising in the management of trade-offs, such as those between the scales of resilience. For the purpose of illustration, this research note refers to examples of building resilience at a local level in Germany, dealing with heat stress in urban areas, managing the risk of extreme flood events, and analyzing the resilience of innovative infrastructure solutions.
C1 [Hutter, Gerard; Olfert, Alfred; Neubert, Marco; Ortlepp, Regine] Leibniz Inst Ecol Urban & Reg Dev IOER, Res Area Built Environm Resources & Environm Risk, Weberpl 1, D-01217 Dresden, Germany.
C3 Leibniz Institut fur okologische Raumentwicklung
RP Hutter, G (corresponding author), Leibniz Inst Ecol Urban & Reg Dev IOER, Res Area Built Environm Resources & Environm Risk, Weberpl 1, D-01217 Dresden, Germany.
EM g.hutter@ioer.de; a.olfert@ioer.de; m.neubert@ioer.de; r.ortlepp@ioer.de
RI Neubert, Marco/AFF-5749-2022; Olfert, Alfred/AAC-8992-2020; Ortlepp,
   Regine/C-2861-2008
OI Neubert, Marco/0000-0002-9970-4555; Ortlepp, Regine/0000-0002-2109-7468
FU Umweltbundesamt [FKZ 3715 48 102 0, FKZ: 3719 15 103 0];
   Bundesministerium fuer Umwelt, Naturschutz, Bau und Reaktorsicherheit
   [FKZ 03DAS104ABCDE]; Bundesministerium fuer Bildung und Forschung
   [01LR1705]
FX Funding This research was funded by the Umweltbundesamt, grant number
   FKZ 3715 48 102 0, the Umweltbundesamt, grant number FKZ: 3719 15 103 0,
   the Bundesministerium fuer Umwelt, Naturschutz, Bau und
   Reaktorsicherheit, grant number FKZ 03DAS104ABCDE, and the
   Bundesministerium fuer Bildung und Forschung, grant number 01LR1705.
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NR 56
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 4
U2 19
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD NOV
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 22
AR 12459
DI 10.3390/su132212459
PG 22
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XI0OG
UT WOS:000725821900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mukherjee, I
   Coban, MK
   Bali, AS
AF Mukherjee, Ishani
   Coban, M. Kerem
   Bali, Azad Singh
TI Policy capacities and effective policy design: a review
SO POLICY SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Policy capacity; Policy effectiveness; Policy design; Policy success;
   Policy sciences; Policy instruments; Policy tools
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; POLITICAL FEASIBILITY; ENVIRONMENTAL-POLICY;
   RENEWABLE ENERGY; PUBLIC MANAGERS; GOVERNANCE; INSTRUMENTS; STATE;
   REFORM; TOOLS
AB Effectiveness has been understood at three levels of analysis in the scholarly study of policy design. The first is at the systemic level indicating what entails effective formulation environments or spaces making them conducive to successful design. The second reflects more program level concerns, surrounding how policy tool portfolios or mixes can be effectively constructed to address complex policy objectives. The third is a more specific instrument level, focusing on what accounts for and constitutes the effectiveness of particular types of policy tools. Undergirding these three levels of analysis are comparative research concerns that concentrate on the capacities of government and political actors to devise and implement effective designs. This paper presents a systematic review of a largely scattered yet quickly burgeoning body of knowledge in the policy sciences, which broadly asks what capacities engender effectiveness at the multiple levels of policy design? The findings bring to light lessons about design effectiveness at the level of formulation spaces, policy mixes and policy programs. Further, this review points to a future research agenda for design studies that is sensitive to the relative orders of policy capacity, temporality and complementarities between the various dimensions of policy capacity.
C1 [Mukherjee, Ishani] Singapore Management Univ, Sch Social Sci, 90 Stamford Rd,Level 4, Singapore 178903, Singapore.
   [Coban, M. Kerem] Koc Univ, GLODEM, TR-34450 Istanbul, Turkey.
   [Bali, Azad Singh] Australian Natl Univ, Sch Polit & Int Relat, Univ Ave, Acton, ACT 2600, Australia.
   [Bali, Azad Singh] Australian Natl Univ, Crawford Sch Publ Policy, Univ Ave, Acton, ACT 2600, Australia.
C3 Singapore Management University; Koc University; Australian National
   University; Australian National University
RP Mukherjee, I (corresponding author), Singapore Management Univ, Sch Social Sci, 90 Stamford Rd,Level 4, Singapore 178903, Singapore.
EM ishanim@smu.edu.sg; m.keremcoban@u.nus.edu; azadsingh.bali@anu.edu.au
RI Coban, M. Kerem/N-2641-2014; Mukherjee, Ishani/AAE-3694-2021
OI Mukherjee, Ishani/0000-0002-1889-858X; Coban, Mehmet
   Kerem/0000-0003-3226-6340
FU Sabanci University; GLODEM, Koc University
FX The authors thank Kidjie Saguin for his support in preparation of
   earlier versions of this paper. Kerem gratefully acknowledges the
   organizational support of Sabanci University and GLODEM, Koc University,
   as part of the paper was written during his Part-time lectureship at
   Sabanci University.
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NR 170
TC 49
Z9 54
U1 35
U2 207
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0032-2687
EI 1573-0891
J9 POLICY SCI
JI Policy Sci.
PD JUN
PY 2021
VL 54
IS 2
BP 243
EP 268
DI 10.1007/s11077-021-09420-8
EA APR 2021
PG 26
WC Public Administration; Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Social Sciences - Other Topics
GA SC7FB
UT WOS:000637663300001
PM 33846660
OA Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Boselli, V
   Ouallali, A
   Briak, H
   Houssni, M
   Kassout, J
   El Ouahrani, A
   Michailidi, EM
AF Boselli, Vladimiro
   Ouallali, Abdessalam
   Briak, Hamza
   Houssni, Mhammad
   Kassout, Jalal
   El Ouahrani, Abdeltif
   Michailidi, Eleni Maria
TI System Dynamics Applied to Terraced Agroecosystems: The Case Study of
   Assaragh (Anti-Atlas Mountains, Morocco)
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE terraced landscapes; agroecosystems; system dynamics; climate change
ID LAND ABANDONMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE; SOIL-EROSION; IRRIGATION; LANDSCAPE;
   CONSERVATION; CULTURES; REGION; NORTH; AREAS
AB Terraced agroecosystems (TAS)-apart from being an important cultural heritage element-are considered vital for sustainable water resource management and climate change adaptation measures. However, this traditional form of agriculture, with direct implications in food security at a local scale, has been suffering from abandonment or degradation worldwide. In light of this, the need to fully comprehend the complex linkage of their abandonment with different driving forces is essential. The identification of these dynamics makes possible an appropriate intervention with local initiatives and policies on a larger scale. Therefore, the main aim of this paper is to introduce a comprehensive multidisciplinary framework that maps the dynamics of the investigated TAS's abandonment, by defining cause-effect relationships on a hydrogeological, ecological and social level, through tools from System Dynamics studies. This methodology is implemented in the case of Assaragh TAS, a traditional oasis agroecosystem in the Moroccan Anti-Atlas, characterized by data scarcity. Through field studies, interviews, questionnaires and freely accessible databases, the TAS's abandonment, leading to a loss in agrobiodiversity, is linked to social rather than climatic drives. Additionally, measures that can counteract the phenomenon and strengthen the awareness of the risks associated with climate change and food security are proposed.
C1 [Boselli, Vladimiro] Univ Brescia, Dipartimento Ingn Civile Architettura Terr Ambien, Via Branze 43, I-25123 Brescia, Italy.
   [Ouallali, Abdessalam] Abdelmalek Essaadi Univ, Dept Geol, Ave Sebta, Tetouan 93002, Morocco.
   [Briak, Hamza] Mohammed VI Polytech Univ, Ctr Soil & Fertilizer Res Africa CESFRA, Lot 660, Hay Moulay Rachid 43150, Ben Guerir, Morocco.
   [Houssni, Mhammad; Kassout, Jalal; El Ouahrani, Abdeltif] Abdelmalek Essaadi Univ, Dept Biol, Ave Sebta, Tetouan 93002, Morocco.
   [Michailidi, Eleni Maria] Reg Veneto, Direz Difesa Suolo, Calle Priuli 99, I-30121 Venice, Italy.
C3 University of Brescia; Abdelmalek Essaadi University of Tetouan;
   Mohammed VI Polytechnic University; Abdelmalek Essaadi University of
   Tetouan
RP Boselli, V (corresponding author), Univ Brescia, Dipartimento Ingn Civile Architettura Terr Ambien, Via Branze 43, I-25123 Brescia, Italy.
EM v.boselli@unibs.it; abdessalamouallali@gmail.com; hamza.briak@um6p.ma;
   mhammadhoussni@gmail.com; jalalkassout@gmail.com; elouahrani@gmail.com;
   elenimaria.michailidi@regione.veneto.it
RI kassout, Jalal/W-5893-2018; OUALLALI, Abdessalam/ABG-9555-2021; Boselli,
   Vladimiro/GYA-1175-2022
OI BRIAK, Hamza/0000-0001-6088-5785; Kassout, Jalal/0000-0002-3702-2751;
   Michailidi, Eleni Maria/0000-0003-0754-0264; Houssni,
   Mhammad/0000-0003-0930-5794; El Ouahrani, Abdeltif/0000-0003-1948-0836;
   OUALLALI, Abdessalam/0000-0003-4351-0142; Boselli,
   Vladimiro/0000-0003-2985-6358
FU Universita degli Studi di Brescia
FX This study has been funded by V.B. with his Ph.D. research fund from the
   Universita degli Studi di Brescia and with his personal resources.
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NR 108
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 2
U2 20
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD JUN
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 6
AR 1693
DI 10.3390/w12061693
PG 34
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA ML4QH
UT WOS:000549452000001
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Hochachka, G
AF Hochachka, Gail
TI On <i>matryoshkas</i> and meaning-making: Understanding the plasticity
   of climate change
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Meaning-making; Developmental psychology;
   Local ownership; Transformation; El Salvador; Photovoice
ID PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTANCE; VALUES; COMMUNITIES; ADAPTATION; ENGAGEMENT;
   EXPLORE; SYSTEM
AB Climate change is a complex issue and means different things to different people. Numerous scholars in history, philosophy, and psychology have explored these multiple meanings, referred to as the plasticity of climate change. Building on psychological research that seeks to explain why meanings differ, I present an analytical framework that draws on adult developmental psychology to explore how meaning is constructed, and how it may become increasingly more complex across a lifespan in a nested manner, much like Russian dolls (or matryoshkas). I then use the framework to analyze photo voice data from a case study about local perspectives on climate change in El Salvador. The main finding from this analysis is that a developmental approach can help to make sense of why there is such plasticity of meanings about climate change. Using photos and their interpretations to illustrate these findings, I examine how perspective-taking capacities arrive at different meanings about climate change, based on the object of awareness, complexity of thought, and scope of time. I then discuss implications of this preliminary work on how developmental psychology could help climate change scholar-practitioners to understand and align with different climate change meanings and support local actors to translate their own meanings about climate change into locally-owned actions.
C1 [Hochachka, Gail] Univ Oslo, Dept Sociol & Human Geog, Fac Social Sci, Postbloks 1096, N-0317 Oslo, Norway.
C3 University of Oslo
RP Hochachka, G (corresponding author), Univ Oslo, Dept Sociol & Human Geog, Fac Social Sci, Postbloks 1096, N-0317 Oslo, Norway.
EM gail.hochachka@sosgeo.uio.no
FU Norwegian Research Council of Norway [250434]; Canada's International
   Development Research Centre in Ottawa [106282-027]
FX This work was supported by the Norwegian Research Council of Norway
   (grant number 250434), and field work in El Salvador was funded by
   Canada's International Development Research Centre in Ottawa (grant
   number 106282-027). Analysis and writing were conducted at the
   University of Oslo associated with the AdaptationCONNECTS research
   project. Photography data was drawn from an action research project
   carried out in partnership between the Canadian non-profit organization
   Drishti-Centre for Integral Action and the Salvadoran non-profit
   organization Fundacion Centro Bartolome de las Casas. Special
   acknowledgement is given to the Salvadoran field work team, namely Larry
   Jose Madrigal, Monica Flores, Walberto Tejeda, Rutilio Delgado, Roberto
   Caceres, Hector Nunez, and Lauren Tenney. Gratitude to Terri O'Fallon
   for her collaboration in data analysis, to scholars in the
   AdaptationCONNECTS research group for their help in framing and editing,
   and to Karen O'Brien, Darcy Riddell, Annick de Witt, Tom Murray, Roland
   Stanich and Ken Wilber for their excellent edits.
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NR 80
TC 21
Z9 23
U1 0
U2 9
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD JUL
PY 2019
VL 57
AR 101917
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2019.05.001
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA IP9MX
UT WOS:000480375400011
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cotton, M
   Stevens, E
AF Cotton, Matthew
   Stevens, Emma
TI Mapping Discourses of Climate Change Adaptation in the United Kingdom
SO WEATHER CLIMATE AND SOCIETY
LA English
DT Article
DE Social Science
ID EXTREME WEATHER; PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT; Q-METHODOLOGY; RISK; POLICY;
   VULNERABILITY; SCIENCE; LEVEL; PERCEPTIONS; MANAGEMENT
AB The concept of adaptation is becoming part of mainstream public discourse on climate change. Yet the diversity, complexity, and novelty of the adaptation concept itself leads to interpretive flexibility, differing public understanding of (and engagement with) adaptation strategies, and hence differentiated policy responses. The boundary work of communicative practices and public understanding of the adaptation concept therefore requires empirical analysis in different cases and contexts. This study employs Q-methodology (a combined quantitative-qualitative social research method) to reveal the typologies of perspectives that emerge around the adaptation concept among a diverse group of citizen-stakeholders in the United Kingdom. Four such typologies are identified under the labels 1) top-down climate action, 2) collective action on climate change, 3) optimistic, values-focused adaptation, and 4) adaptation skepticism. The division between these perspectives reveals a perceived responsibility gap between the governmental-institutional and/or individual-community levels. Across the emergent discourses we find a consensual call for a multisector, multiscalar, and multistakeholder-led approach that posits adaptation as a contemporary, intragenerational problem, with a strong emphasis upon managing extreme weather events, and not as an abstract future problem. By attending to these public discourses in climate policy, this presents a potential means to lessen such a responsibility gap.
C1 [Cotton, Matthew] Univ York, Dept Environm, York, N Yorkshire, England.
   [Stevens, Emma] Univ Sheffield, Dept Urban Studies & Planning, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England.
C3 University of York - UK; University of Sheffield
RP Cotton, M (corresponding author), Univ York, Dept Environm, York, N Yorkshire, England.
EM matthew.cotton@york.ac.uk
OI Cotton, Matthew/0000-0002-8877-4822
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NR 111
TC 14
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 56
PU AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
PI BOSTON
PA 45 BEACON ST, BOSTON, MA 02108-3693, UNITED STATES
SN 1948-8327
EI 1948-8335
J9 WEATHER CLIM SOC
JI Weather Clim. Soc.
PD JAN
PY 2019
VL 11
IS 1
BP 17
EP 32
DI 10.1175/WCAS-D-18-0024.1
PG 16
WC Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA GX3NE
UT WOS:000447630300001
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Davies, HJ
   Doick, KJ
   Hudson, MD
   Schaafsma, M
   Schreckenberg, K
   Valatin, G
AF Davies, Helen J.
   Doick, Kieron J.
   Hudson, Malcolm D.
   Schaafsma, Marije
   Schreckenberg, Kate
   Valatin, Gregory
TI Business attitudes towards funding ecosystem services provided by urban
   forests
SO ECOSYSTEM SERVICES
LA English
DT Article
DE Payments for ecosystem services; Public-private partnerships; City
   trees; Climate change adaptation; Corporate social responsibility
ID GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PAYMENTS; PES; ENGAGEMENT;
   CHALLENGES; FRAMEWORK; BENEFITS; POLICY; SPACE
AB Urban trees and woodlands provide a wide range of ecosystem services (ES) to society, for example, flood risk reduction, air purification, and moderation of urban heat islands. Despite this, local government budgets for tree planting and maintenance have declined in many cities throughout the world. Thus far, the academic literature has largely ignored whether businesses are willing to help fund urban forests and the ES they provide. Business financing via payments for ecosystem services (PES) within the urban realm is also under-researched and lacking in practice. This study aims to address these research gaps. Semi-structured interviews were carried out with 30 businesses of varying sizes and sectors, operating in Southampton, UK. Respondents thought a public-private partnership would be feasible, with a focus on voluntary payments towards enhancing air quality, reducing flood risk, and improving aesthetics. Respondents would prefer to choose from a list of location-specific, cost-effective, monitored projects to fund directly, for marketing and/or corporate social responsibility purposes. To facilitate business funding of urban forest-based ES, clear communication of the expected environmental benefits and a strong business case are required, drawing on the experience of similar initiatives. From our findings, we recommend the piloting and analysis of such PES schemes.
C1 [Davies, Helen J.; Hudson, Malcolm D.; Schaafsma, Marije] Univ Southampton, Sch Geog & Environm Sci, Highfield Campus,Univ Rd, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.
   [Doick, Kieron J.] Forest Res, Urban Forest Res Grp, Farnham GU10 4LH, Surrey, England.
   [Schreckenberg, Kate] Kings Coll London, Dept Geog, London WC2R 2LS, England.
   [Valatin, Gregory] Forest Res, Social & Econ Res Grp, Farnham GU10 4LH, Surrey, England.
C3 University of Southampton; University of London; King's College London
RP Davies, HJ (corresponding author), Univ Southampton, Sch Geog & Environm Sci, Highfield Campus,Univ Rd, Southampton SO17 1BJ, Hants, England.
EM hjd1g15@soton.ac.uk; Kieron.Doick@forestry.gsi.gov.uk; mdh@soton.ac.uk;
   M.Schaafsma@soton.ac.uk; kate.schreckenberg@kcl.ac.uk;
   Gregory.Valatin@forestry.gsi.gov.uk
RI Schaafsma, Marije/P-7795-2019; Schreckenberg, Kate/K-4967-2012
OI Schreckenberg, Kate/0000-0002-3666-3792; Schaafsma,
   Marije/0000-0003-0878-069X
FU EPSRC; University of Southampton; Scottish Forestry Trust; Forest
   Research
FX Funding for the research was provided by EPSRC, the University of
   Southampton, the Scottish Forestry Trust, and Forest Research.
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NR 82
TC 21
Z9 25
U1 8
U2 75
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
PI AMSTERDAM
PA PO BOX 211, 1000 AE AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0416
J9 ECOSYST SERV
JI Ecosyst. Serv.
PD AUG
PY 2018
VL 32
BP 159
EP 169
DI 10.1016/j.ecoser.2018.07.006
PN B
PG 11
WC Ecology; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA GQ7PG
UT WOS:000441935700001
OA Green Published, hybrid, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Charlton, MB
   Bowes, MJ
   Hutchins, MG
   Orr, HG
   Soley, R
   Davison, P
AF Charlton, Matthew B.
   Bowes, Michael J.
   Hutchins, Michael G.
   Orr, Harriet G.
   Soley, Rob
   Davison, Paul
TI Mapping eutrophication risk from climate change: Future phosphorus
   concentrations in English rivers
SO SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Water Framework Directive; Orthophosphate;
   Future-river flows
ID WATER-QUALITY; NUTRIENT DYNAMICS; SUMMER DROUGHTS; UK; IMPACT; FLOWS;
   POLLUTION; DIFFUSE; PROJECTIONS; ENSEMBLE
AB Climate change is expected to increase eutrophication risk in rivers yet few studies identify the timescale or spatial extent of such impacts. Phosphorus concentration, considered the primary driver of eutrophication risk in English rivers, may increase through reduced dilution particularly if river flows are lower in summer. Detailed models can indicate change in catchment phosphorus concentrations but targeted support for mitigation measures requires a national scale evaluation of risk.
   In this study, a load apportionment model is used to describe the current relationship between flow and total reactive phosphorus (TRP) at 115 river sites across England. These relationships are used to estimate TRP concentrations for the 2050s under 11 climate change driven scenarios of future river flows and under scenarios of both current and higher levels of sewage treatment.
   National maps of change indicate a small but inconsistent increase in annual average TRP concentrations with a greater change in summer. Reducing the TRP concentration of final sewage effluent to 0.5mg/L P for all upstream sewage treatment works was inadequate to meet existing P standards required through the EU Water Framework Directive, indicating that more needs to be done, including efforts to reduce diffuse pollution. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Charlton, Matthew B.; Orr, Harriet G.] Environm Agcy, Horizon House,Deanery Rd, Bristol BS1 5AH, Avon, England.
   [Bowes, Michael J.; Hutchins, Michael G.] Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Maclean Bldg, Wallingford OX10 8BB, Oxon, England.
   [Soley, Rob; Davison, Paul] Amec Foster Wheeler Environm & Infrastruct UK Ltd, Cannon Court, Shrewsbury SY2 5DE, Salop, England.
C3 UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH)
RP Charlton, MB (corresponding author), Environm Agcy, Horizon House,Deanery Rd, Bristol BS1 5AH, Avon, England.
EM matt.charlton@environment-agency.gov.uk
RI Charlton, Matthew/AAM-1251-2021; Hutchins, Michael/K-3370-2012; Orr,
   Harriet/AAP-2665-2020; Bowes, Mike/E-1528-2011
OI Charlton, Matthew/0000-0003-2045-4184; Bowes, Mike/0000-0002-0673-1934;
   Hutchins, Michael/0000-0003-3764-5331; Orr, Harriet/0000-0001-5021-1074
FU Environment Agency project 'Climate Change and Eutrophication'
   [SC140013]; NERC [NE/R016429/1, ceh020014, ceh020010] Funding Source:
   UKRI
FX This work was funded by the Environment Agency project 'Climate Change
   and Eutrophication' (SC140013). The views represented are those of the
   authors and do not represent the position of the Environment Agency or
   other institutions. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Prof.
   Christel Prudhomme (formerly of CEH, now at EMCWF) for accessing Future
   Flows Hydrology and Climatology datasets, and Richard Wells (formerly of
   AMECFW) for helping in some of the early analysis.
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NR 50
TC 61
Z9 67
U1 6
U2 152
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0048-9697
EI 1879-1026
J9 SCI TOTAL ENVIRON
JI Sci. Total Environ.
PD FEB 1
PY 2018
VL 613
BP 1510
EP 1526
DI 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.07.218
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA FL3XT
UT WOS:000414160500149
PM 28886914
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Pathan, A
   Mavrogianni, A
   Summerfield, A
   Oreszczyn, T
   Davies, M
AF Pathan, A.
   Mavrogianni, A.
   Summerfield, A.
   Oreszczyn, T.
   Davies, M.
TI Monitoring summer indoor overheating in the London housing stock
SO ENERGY AND BUILDINGS
LA English
DT Article
DE Overheating; Temperature; Monitoring; Housing; Dwellings; Climate change
ID URBAN HEAT-ISLAND; CLIMATE-CHANGE; INTERNAL TEMPERATURES; RELATIVE
   IMPORTANCE; THERMAL COMFORT; UK HOMES; DWELLINGS; IMPACT; ENERGY;
   MORTALITY
AB In light of current climate change projections in recent years, there has been an increasing interest in the assessment of indoor overheating in domestic environments in previously heating-dominated climates. This paper presents a monitoring study of overheating in 122 London dwellings during the summers of 2009 and 2010. Dry Bulb Temperature and Relative Humidity in the main living and sleeping area were monitored at 10 min intervals. The ASHRAE Standard 55 adaptive thermal comfort method was applied, which uses outdoor temperature to derive the optimum indoor comfort temperature. It was found that 29% of all living rooms and 31% of all bedrooms monitored during 2009 had more than 1% of summertime occupied hours outside the comfort zone recommended by the standard to achieve 90% acceptability. In 2010, 37% of monitored living rooms and 49% of monitored bedrooms had more than 1% of summertime occupied hours outside this comfort zone. The findings of this study indicate that London dwellings face a significant risk of overheating under the current climate. Occupant exposure to excess indoor temperatures is likely to be exacerbated in the future if climate change adaptation strategies are not incorporated in Building Regulations, building design and retrofit. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Pathan, A.; Mavrogianni, A.; Davies, M.] UCL, UCL Inst Environm Design & Engn IEDE, Bartlett Sch Environm Energy & Resources, Bartlett Fac Built Environm, Cent House,14 Upper Woburn Pl, London WC1H 0NN, England.
   [Summerfield, A.; Oreszczyn, T.] UCL, UCL Energy Inst, Bartlett Sch Environm Energy & Resources, Bartlett Fac Built Environm, London WC1H 0NN, England.
C3 University of London; University College London; University of London;
   University College London
RP Mavrogianni, A (corresponding author), UCL, UCL Inst Environm Design & Engn IEDE, Bartlett Sch Environm Energy & Resources, Bartlett Fac Built Environm, Cent House,14 Upper Woburn Pl, London WC1H 0NN, England.
EM a.mavrogianni@ucl.ac.uk
OI Davies, Michael/0000-0003-2173-7063; Mavrogianni,
   Anna/0000-0002-5104-1238
FU Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC)
   [EP/E016375/1]; RCUK Centre for Energy Epidemiology grant
   [EP/K011839/1]; EPSRC [EP/E016375/1, EP/P022405/1, EP/K011839/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX The LUCID project was funded by an Engineering and Physical Sciences
   Research Council (EPSRC) grant (EP/E016375/1). T. Oreszczyn, A.
   Summerfield and M.Davies are currently supported via the RCUK Centre for
   Energy Epidemiology grant (EP/K011839/1). The authors would like to
   thank the study participants for their time and input.
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NR 92
TC 79
Z9 82
U1 2
U2 41
PU ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
PI LAUSANNE
PA PO BOX 564, 1001 LAUSANNE, SWITZERLAND
SN 0378-7788
EI 1872-6178
J9 ENERG BUILDINGS
JI Energy Build.
PD APR 15
PY 2017
VL 141
BP 361
EP 378
DI 10.1016/j.enbuild.2017.02.049
PG 18
WC Construction & Building Technology; Energy & Fuels; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA ET3XG
UT WOS:000400212400031
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Grydehoj, A
   Kelman, I
AF Grydehoj, Adam
   Kelman, Ilan
TI The eco-island trap: climate change mitigation and conspicuous
   sustainability
SO AREA
LA English
DT Article
DE islands; climate change mitigation; conspicuous sustainability;
   renewable energy; sustainability; ecotourism
ID DEVELOPING STATES
AB Small islands worldwide are increasingly turning to conspicuous sustainability as a development strategy. Island spatiality encourages renewable energy and sustainability initiatives that emphasise iconicity and are undertaken in order to gain competitive advantage, strengthen sustainable tourism or ecotourism, claim undue credit, distract from failures of governance or obviate the need for more comprehensive policy action. Without necessarily contributing significantly to climate change mitigation, the pursuit of eco-island status can raise costs without raising income, distract from more pressing social and environmental problems, lead to competitive sustainability and provide green cover behind which communities can maintain unsustainable practices. We argue that eco-islands do not successfully encourage wider sustainable development and climate change mitigation. Instead, island communities may place themselves in eco-island traps. Islands may invest in inefficient or ineffective renewable energy and sustainability initiatives in order to maintain illusory eco-island status for the benefit of ecotourism, thereby becoming trapped by the eco-label. Islands may also chase the diminishing returns of ever-more comprehensive and difficult to achieve sustainability, becoming trapped into serving as eco-island exemplars. We conclude by arguing that island communities should pursue locally contextualised development, potentially focused on climate change adaptation, rather than focus on an eco-island status that is oriented toward place branding and ecotourism.
C1 [Grydehoj, Adam] Isl Dynam, DK-2300 Copenhagen S, Denmark.
   [Grydehoj, Adam] Univ Prince Edward Isl, Inst Isl Studies, Charlottetown, PE C1A 4P3, Canada.
   [Kelman, Ilan] UCL, Inst Risk & Disaster Reduct, London WC1E 6BT, England.
   [Kelman, Ilan] UCL, Inst Global Hlth, London WC1E 6BT, England.
   [Kelman, Ilan] Norwegian Inst Int Affairs, N-0033 Oslo, Norway.
C3 University of Prince Edward Island; University of London; University
   College London; University of London; University College London
RP Grydehoj, A (corresponding author), Isl Dynam, DK-2300 Copenhagen S, Denmark.; Grydehoj, A (corresponding author), Univ Prince Edward Isl, Inst Isl Studies, Charlottetown, PE C1A 4P3, Canada.
EM agrydehoj@islanddynamics.org
RI Grydehoj, Adam/GXM-9917-2022
OI Kelman, Ilan/0000-0002-4191-6969; Grydehoj, Adam/0000-0002-9149-9497
CR [Anonymous], GUARDIAN
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NR 44
TC 79
Z9 83
U1 1
U2 60
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0004-0894
EI 1475-4762
J9 AREA
JI Area
PD MAR
PY 2017
VL 49
IS 1
BP 106
EP 113
DI 10.1111/area.12300
PG 8
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA EN9VW
UT WOS:000396348700013
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Akin, SM
   Martens, P
   Huynen, MMTE
AF Akin, Su-Mia
   Martens, Pim
   Huynen, Maud M. T. E.
TI Climate Change and Infectious Disease Risk in Western Europe: A Survey
   of Dutch Expert Opinion on Adaptation Responses and Actors
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; public health; infectious diseases; climate change
   adaptation
AB There is growing evidence of climate change affecting infectious disease risk in Western Europe. The call for effective adaptation to this challenge becomes increasingly stronger. This paper presents the results of a survey exploring Dutch expert perspectives on adaptation responses to climate change impacts on infectious disease risk in Western Europe. Additionally, the survey explores the expert sample's prioritization of mitigation and adaptation, and expert views on the willingness and capacity of relevant actors to respond to climate change. An integrated view on the causation of infectious disease risk is employed, including multiple (climatic and non-climatic) factors. The results show that the experts consider some adaptation responses as relatively more cost-effective, like fostering interagency and community partnerships, or beneficial to health, such as outbreak investigation and response. Expert opinions converge and diverge for different adaptation responses. Regarding the prioritization of mitigation and adaptation responses expert perspectives converge towards a 50/50 budgetary allocation. The experts consider the national government/health authority as the most capable actor to respond to climate change-induced infectious disease risk. Divergence and consensus among expert opinions can influence adaptation policy processes. Further research is necessary to uncover prevailing expert perspectives and their roots, and compare these.
C1 [Akin, Su-Mia; Martens, Pim; Huynen, Maud M. T. E.] Maastricht Univ, Int Ctr Integrated Assessment & Sustainable Dev I, NL-6200 MD Maastricht, Netherlands.
C3 Maastricht University
RP Akin, SM (corresponding author), Maastricht Univ, Int Ctr Integrated Assessment & Sustainable Dev I, POB 616, NL-6200 MD Maastricht, Netherlands.
EM su-mia.akin@maastrichtuniversity.nl; p.martens@maastrichtuniversity.nl;
   m.huynen@maastrichtuniversity.nl
RI Martens, Pim/A-9297-2011
OI Huynen, Maud/0000-0003-1754-2810; Martens, Pim/0000-0002-7489-0048;
   Akin, Su-Mia Fazilet/0009-0003-0548-5676
FU ERA-ENVHEALTH programme by VROM (Dutch Ministry of Infrastructure and
   the Environment) as a part of the ENHCE (ERA-NET Health and Climate in
   Europe) research project
FX This study was funded under the ERA-ENVHEALTH programme by VROM (Dutch
   Ministry of Infrastructure and the Environment) as a part of the ENHCE
   (ERA-NET Health and Climate in Europe) research project. We thank the
   anonymous respondents for their participation in the survey.
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NR 34
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 2
U2 16
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1660-4601
J9 INT J ENV RES PUB HE
JI Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health
PD AUG
PY 2015
VL 12
IS 8
BP 9726
EP 9749
DI 10.3390/ijerph120809726
PG 24
WC Environmental Sciences; Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public, Environmental & Occupational
   Health
GA CQ4PT
UT WOS:000360587800073
PM 26295247
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Murali, J
   Afifi, T
AF Murali, Janakaraj
   Afifi, Tamer
TI Rainfall variability, food security and human mobility in the
   Janjgir-Champa district of Chhattisgarh state, India
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE rural livelihoods; rainfall variability; climate change resilience;
   climate change adaptation; food security; human migration
ID MIGRATION
AB The impacts of rainfall variability are threatening food production systems, leading to losses of livelihood and food insecurity. The frequency and intensity of floods and drought are likely to be higher as a result of climate change. This case study presents an empirical account of the impacts of rainfall variability on agriculture, food security, livelihoods and human mobility in the Janjigir-Champa district of Chhattisgarh. The research tests the hypothesis that human migration is a major coping mechanism against climate variability. The findings confirm that a coordination mechanism exists between rainfall changes (i.e. erratic rainfall patterns in terms of delayed monsoons, seasonal shifts, drought and floods) and livelihood and food security of a number of farmers and farm labourers in the research site. Because there is only a single annual harvest of paddy rice (practiced as monoculture) in the research site, which is partly due to the non-availability of water for a second crop, marginal farmers and farm labourers are left with very few options in finding sufficient employment in and around their villages. Some people cope with the situation by seeking assistance from their relatives, friends and the government. However, seasonal and permanent migrations are the most opted-for coping strategies in the study area.
C1 [Murali, Janakaraj] Energy & Resources Inst TERI, Darbari Seth Block, IHC Complex, New Delhi, India.
   [Murali, Janakaraj] Energy & Resources Inst TERI, New Delhi 110003, India.
   [Afifi, Tamer] United Nations Univ, Inst Environm & Human Secur UN EHS, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
C3 TERI University; TERI University
RP Afifi, T (corresponding author), United Nations Univ, Inst Environm & Human Secur UN EHS, Hermann Ehlers Str 10, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
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NR 20
TC 33
Z9 35
U1 1
U2 49
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD JAN 2
PY 2014
VL 6
IS 1
SI SI
BP 28
EP 37
DI 10.1080/17565529.2013.867248
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AE4XG
UT WOS:000333989200003
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Boer, H
AF Boer, H.
TI Policy options for, and constraints on, effective adaptation for rivers
   and wetlands in northeast Queensland
SO AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation policies; rivers; wetland ecosystems
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; MANAGEMENT; COASTAL; BIODIVERSITY;
   CONSERVATION; RESTORATION; IMPACTS; SCOPE
AB Developing and implementing effective adaptation policies for freshwater and estuarine systems in Australia will be a significant challenge in a rapidly changing climate. The broad aims of climate change adaptation policies are to reduce vulnerability and increase the adaptive capacity and resilience of ecosystems to climate change impacts. There are a range of adaptation policy options relevant to aquatic systems, and many of these measures can be 'mainstreamed' or incorporated into existing conservation and resource management frameworks. This article evaluates adaptation policy options and the constraints on policy implementation for freshwater and estuarine ecosystems in the coastal floodplains of tropical Queensland. Many of these aquatic systems are in a degraded condition and are vulnerable to the compounded impacts of climate change and other stressors. The analysis suggests that statutory planning schemes, water resource planning and protected area frameworks provide limited scope to address the more severe threats to these systems from rising sea levels, extreme cyclones, floods and droughts. In many locations, the effectiveness of adaptation policies is constrained by existing land uses and competing demands from communities and industry sectors. To prevent further widespread loss of habitat may require the development and implementation of new policies that prioritise adaptation management for freshwater and estuarine ecosystems.
C1 Griffith Univ, Ctr Governance & Publ Policy, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia.
C3 Griffith University
RP Boer, H (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Ctr Governance & Publ Policy, Nathan, Qld 4111, Australia.
EM henry.boer@student.griffith.edu.au
OI Boer, Henry/0000-0002-3007-1358
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NR 47
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 0
U2 39
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1448-6563
EI 2159-5356
J9 AUSTRALAS J ENV MAN
JI Australas. J. Environ. Manag.
PD SEP
PY 2010
VL 17
IS 3
BP 154
EP 164
DI 10.1080/14486563.2010.9725262
PG 11
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 721GV
UT WOS:000287342500004
OA Green Submitted, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bosch, PL
   González, OD
   Sánchez, FG
AF Ley Bosch, Pablo
   de Castro Gonzalez, Oscar
   Garcia Sanchez, Francisco
TI Mass tourism urban destinations and climate change in small islands:
   resilience to extreme rainfall in the Canary Islands
SO ENVIRONMENT DEVELOPMENT AND SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE Mass tourism; Canary Islands; Climate change adaptation; Extreme
   rainfall; Vulnerability; Urban planning
ID MEDITERRANEAN ISLANDS; SUSTAINABLE TOURISM; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES;
   ADAPTATION
AB The Canary Islands are one of the main destinations for mass tourism in the European context, characterized by the absence of seasonality in tourist activity. Moreover, the level of activity increases during the winters, coinciding with a greater probability of extreme rainfall events, whose danger seems to be increasing as a result of climate change. Owing to its pronounced orography, the southern coast of the island of Gran Canaria houses several tourist settlements built along ravines and steeply sloping terrain. This scenario presents considerable risk because of spatial probability of landslide occurrence. The case of San Agustin, especially, serves to test the model of tourist urbanization along the hillside, demonstrating its high fragility in the face of extreme rainfall events. Especially owing to its importance in providing assistance in emergency situations, its vulnerability has been analyzed with regard to accessibility, which is entirely dependent on road mobility. The growth model of San Agustin serves as an example of mass tourism in small islands, allowing urban planners and designers to assess corrective measures based on managing its existing road infrastructure and open spaces right from the planning stage.
C1 [Ley Bosch, Pablo; de Castro Gonzalez, Oscar] Campus Univ Tafira, Univ Palmas Gran Canaria, Dept Arte Ciudad & Terr, Las Palmas Gran Canaria 35017, Spain.
   [Garcia Sanchez, Francisco] Univ Cantabria, Dept Geog Urbanismo & Ordenac Terr, Ave Castros,S-N, Santander 39005, Spain.
C3 Universidad de Las Palmas de Gran Canaria; Universidad de Cantabria
RP Sánchez, FG (corresponding author), Univ Cantabria, Dept Geog Urbanismo & Ordenac Terr, Ave Castros,S-N, Santander 39005, Spain.
EM pablo.ley@ulpgc.es; o.decastrog@gmail.com;
   franciscojose.garcia@unican.es
RI García Sánchez, Francisco/J-7479-2016
OI Garcia Sanchez, Francisco/0000-0003-1911-8749; De Castro Gonzalez, Oscar
   Ignacio/0000-0002-7290-5736
FU CRUE-CSIC agreement; Springer Nature
FX Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with
   Springer Nature.
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NR 73
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 3
U2 16
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1387-585X
EI 1573-2975
J9 ENVIRON DEV SUSTAIN
JI Environ. Dev. Sustain.
PD APR
PY 2024
VL 26
IS 4
BP 10765
EP 10785
DI 10.1007/s10668-023-03406-7
EA JUN 2023
PG 21
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA MR1H5
UT WOS:001000907600006
PM 37362989
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Isola, F
   Leone, F
   Pittau, R
AF Isola, Federica
   Leone, Federica
   Pittau, Rossana
TI Evaluating the urban heat island phenomenon from a spatial planning
   viewpoint. A systematic review
SO TEMA-JOURNAL OF LAND USE MOBILITY AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Urban heat island; Local climate regulation; Spatial planning
ID LAND-SURFACE TEMPERATURE; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; LANDSCAPE
   COMPOSITION; THERMAL COMFORT; MITIGATION; LEVEL; RESILIENCE; VEGETATION;
   SATELLITE; SERVICE
AB The increasing rate of urbanization and continuous population growth in urban areas leads to several problems, including the emergence of urban heat islands (UHI), defined as urban areas where temperatures are higher than in the surrounding rural areas. UHIs have negative impacts on the health of populations and lead to increased energy consumption for cooling. One of the main causes of higher temperatures in urban areas and, therefore, the creation of UHIs is impervious surfaces, which in turn lead to poor thermal comfort in cities. Ecosystem services and, in particular, the ecosystem service of local climate regulation are valuable tools to mitigate the effects of UHI. The contribution reviews the existing literature concerning the mitigation of heat island effects through ecosystem services, in order to understand how they are studied and analyzed in the international scenario. The proposed methodological approach is based on a framework of analysis of the scientific contributions published in the last fifteen years on the subject of UHI, investigating the phenomenon through an interpretation key based on the issues addressed, the methods used and the spatial scales to which these methods have been applied.
C1 [Isola, Federica; Leone, Federica; Pittau, Rossana] Univ Cagliari, Dept Civil & Environm Engn & Architecture, Cagliari, Italy.
C3 University of Cagliari
RP Leone, F (corresponding author), Univ Cagliari, Dept Civil & Environm Engn & Architecture, Cagliari, Italy.
EM federica.isola@unica.it; federicaleone@unica.it; rossana.pittau@unica.it
FU European Union Next GenerationEU [PE 0000005]
FX For Federica Leone. This study was carried out within the RETURN
   Extended Partnership and received funding from the European Union Next
   GenerationEU (National Recovery and Resilience Plan NRRP, Mission 4
   Component 2 Investment 1 3 D D 1243 2 8 2022 PE 0000005. For Rossana
   Pittau. This pubblication was producted while attending the PhD
   programme in Civil Engineering and Architecture at the University of
   Cagliari, Cycle XXXVIII, with the support of a scholarship financed by
   the Ministerial Decree no. 351 of 9th April 2022, based on the
   NRRP-funded by the European Union - NextGenerationEU - Mission 4,
   Component 1, Investment 4.1.
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NR 105
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 3
U2 3
PU UNIV STUDI NAPOLI FEDERICO II, DIPT PIANIFICAZIONE & SCIENZA TERRITORIO
PI NAPLES
PA PIAZZALE TECCHIO 80, NAPLES, 80125, ITALY
SN 1970-9889
EI 1970-9870
J9 TEMA
JI TeMA
PY 2023
SI SI
DI 10.6092/1970-9870/10306
PG 26
WC Urban Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA WE1W7
UT WOS:001253111600004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Davidova, M
AF Davidova, Marie
TI Breathing Artifacts of Urban BioClimatic Layers for Post-Anthropocene
   Urban Environment
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE post-Anthropocene; cross-species coliving; systemic design;
   systems-oriented design; systemic approach to architectural performance;
   metabolic cities; breathing walls; responsive wood; gigamapping
AB This article seeks the qualitative synthesis of schools of thought from extreme climate regions that could support urban biodiversity and climate change adaptation through architectural design. It proposes that climate comfort and biodiversity are closely related. This article suggests a possible systemic urban metabolism within a built environment that can support a transition to post-Anthropocene, where humans and other species live together in synergy. This article exemplifies and seeks systemic relations and reflections of gathered field studies documentation of case studies of breathing walls, envelopes, and screens generating bioclimatic layers in the cultural landscape, selected for their penetrability and performance. The samples from diverse study journeys that were codesigned through vernacular cultures and the author's research by design speculations on the responsive screen 'Ray' are investigated and speculated upon through gigamapping (visual complexity mapping). This gigamapping is not to present any hard data model but to relate, inform and speculate on the investigated field that is grounded in research by design on cross-species coliving. This is approached through possible architectures and architectural and urban design parasites, transitioning towards synergetic landscapes of our envisioned colived and cocreated futures.</p>
C1 [Davidova, Marie] Univ Stuttgart, Cluster Excellence Integrat Computat Design & Con, D-70174 Stuttgart, Germany.
C3 University of Stuttgart
RP Davidova, M (corresponding author), Univ Stuttgart, Cluster Excellence Integrat Computat Design & Con, D-70174 Stuttgart, Germany.
EM marie.davidova@intcdc.uni-stuttgart.de
RI Davidova, Marie/Q-3813-2017
OI Davidova, Marie/0000-0002-1820-148X
FU Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under
   Germanys Excellence Strategy [EXC 2120/1390831618]
FX The research published in this article is supported by the Deutsche
   Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germanys
   Excellence StrategyEXC 2120/1390831618. The authors cordially thank the
   DFG.
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NR 89
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 1
U2 14
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD OCT
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 20
AR 11307
DI 10.3390/su132011307
PG 36
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA WQ4WJ
UT WOS:000713818300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Omukuti, J
AF Omukuti, Jessica
TI Do country-owned adaptation interventions reflect local level
   priorities? Application of a framings approach
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Equity; country-ownership; rights and responsibilities; recognition;
   capabilities; climate risk management
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; PROCEDURAL JUSTICE;
   FOREST MANAGEMENT; FOOD INSECURITY; POLICY; PARTICIPATION;
   VULNERABILITY; CONSERVATION; INSTITUTIONS
AB It is claimed that country ownership enables equitable adaption by ensuring that adaptation interventions address priorities of local level vulnerable populations. This paper uses a framings approach to understand whether country owned interventions are aligned with local level adaptation needs. Three framing - the rights and responsibility, capabilities and recognition framings-are used to identify principles of justice reflected in adaptation interventions and compares them to those expressed by local level communities expected to benefit from these interventions. A case study of a Least Developed Countries Fund-funded and Global Environment Facility-administered coastal adaptation project in Tanzania is used. The analysis finds differences between framings by the project and local communities. The project portrays a rights and responsibilities framing with emphasis on government-led technocratic adaptation. Local level communities prioritize the capabilities framing, where local natural resource management institutions are considered necessary for mediating between resource access by resource-dependent households and resource conservation for coastal adaptation. The findings suggest that country ownership may not necessarily be equitable as local level adaptation priorities can fail to be reflected in country owned interventions.
C1 [Omukuti, Jessica] Univ Reading, Sch Agr Policy & Dev, Agr Bldg,Earley Gate,POB 237, Reading RG6 6AR, Berks, England.
C3 University of Reading
RP Omukuti, J (corresponding author), Univ Reading, Sch Agr Policy & Dev, Agr Bldg,Earley Gate,POB 237, Reading RG6 6AR, Berks, England.
EM Jesss3060@gmail.com
OI OMUKUTI, Jessica/0000-0003-3094-8647
FU Leverhulme Trust in Climate Justice: Ethics, Politics, Law [DS-2014-002]
FX This work was supported by Leverhulme Trust in Climate Justice: Ethics,
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PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD OCT 20
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 9
BP 827
EP 839
DI 10.1080/17565529.2019.1699394
EA DEC 2019
PG 13
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA OS8DZ
UT WOS:000501637000001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Duan, HB
   Zhang, GP
   Wang, SY
   Fan, Y
AF Duan, Hongbo
   Zhang, Gupeng
   Wang, Shouyang
   Fan, Ying
TI Integrated benefit-cost analysis of China's optimal adaptation and
   targeted mitigation
SO ECOLOGICAL ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE Integrated assessment modeling; Targeted mitigation; Optimal adaptation;
   Trade-offs; Benefit-cost effectiveness
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; POLICY; IMPACTS
AB In this work, we develop a regional integrated assessment framework by incorporating both adaptation and mitigation mechanisms to conduct benefit-cost analysis of China's optimal adaptation and portray the relative adaptation cost curve. In particular, we explore the influence of induced optimal mitigation, given the 2-degree warming-increase target, on the effectiveness of adaptation. Although adaptation alone may not be able to tackle all the risks of climate change, it remains a benefit-cost effective option. Our results show that China's optimal adaptation strategy can avoid, on average, 28% of climate damage over the entire simulation horizon. With respect to the reduction of adverse climate effects, the effect of a policy mix of both adaptation and mitigation does not appear to be "1 + 1 >= 2", despite the combination strategy is still the better option compared to adaptation or mitigation alone. Robustness analysis reveals that the choice of time scales is important for policy effectiveness assessment, and the discount rate tells most of the story. Specifically, the lower the discount level, the higher the policy effectiveness; and the effectiveness of targeted policy would be significantly reinforced if a longer time scale is considered, given the same discount rate.
C1 [Duan, Hongbo] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sch Econ & Management, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China.
   [Zhang, Gupeng] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sch Publ Policy & Management, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
   [Wang, Shouyang] Chinese Acad Sci, Acad Math & Syst Sci, Beijing 100190, Peoples R China.
   [Fan, Ying] Beihang Univ, Sch Econ & Management, Beijing 100191, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences,
   CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of Chinese Academy of
   Sciences, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Academy of Mathematics &
   System Sciences, CAS; Beihang University
RP Zhang, GP (corresponding author), Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Sch Publ Policy & Management, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
EM zhanggupeng@ucas.ac.cn
RI Wang, Xinyi/AAE-4342-2019; Fan, Ying/AEN-9421-2022
OI Duan, Hongbo/0000-0001-5143-4413; Wang, Shouyang/0000-0001-5773-998X
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [71874177, 71690245,
   71503242, 71872169]; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences
   Foundation
FX We greatly appreciate all the editors and anonymous referees for their
   time and valuable comments on this work. The following financial
   supporters of this research are also acknowledged: National Natural
   Science Foundation of China (Grand Nos. 71874177, 71690245, 71503242,
   71872169), and University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Foundation
   (Grand No. Y8540XX1Z2).
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WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Business & Economics
GA HV8UT
UT WOS:000466260300007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Palutikof, JP
   Leitch, AM
   Rissik, D
   Boulter, SL
   Campbell, MJ
   Vidaurre, ACP
   Webb, S
   Tonmoy, FN
AF Palutikof, J. P.
   Leitch, Anne M.
   Rissik, D.
   Boulter, S. L.
   Campbell, M. J.
   Vidaurre, A. C. Perez
   Webb, S.
   Tonmoy, Fahim N.
TI Overcoming knowledge barriers to adaptation using a decision support
   framework
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ORGANIZATIONAL BARRIERS; LOCAL-GOVERNMENT;
   ENTERPRISES; CHALLENGES; AUSTRALIA; SCALE
AB A decision support and information delivery framework, CoastAdapt, has been built to support the coastal adaptation community in Australia to take action to address climate change and sea-level rise. For such frameworks to be useful, used and long-lived, their development requires collaboration between creators and potential users. Therefore, we undertook extensive consultation throughout the design, build and evaluation. In this paper, we explore those aspects of the consultation that focused on understanding and addressing user needs and how CoastAdapt could best provide support to effectively carry out adaptation planning and action. The first step was to identify, through an online survey and workshops, the knowledge gaps and barriers that could be addressed by CoastAdapt. The responses fed into the design and build, together with additional feedback from users on the layout and content. Following release of the beta version, further comments from users were collected and scrutinised to identify modifications that could increase relevance and utility. Finally, test cases were carried out to understand whether CoastAdapt is truly fit for purpose in addressing real-world' adaptation situations. The end result is a supportive framework for coastal adaptation that will require constant monitoring and updating to ensure it remains fit for purpose given Australia's rapidly evolving adaptation landscape.
C1 [Palutikof, J. P.; Leitch, Anne M.; Rissik, D.; Boulter, S. L.; Campbell, M. J.; Vidaurre, A. C. Perez; Webb, S.; Tonmoy, Fahim N.] Griffith Univ, Natl Climate Change Adaptat Res Facil, Gold Coast, Qld 4222, Australia.
   [Tonmoy, Fahim N.] Griffith Univ, Griffith Ctr Coastal Management, Gold Coast, Qld 4222, Australia.
C3 Griffith University; Griffith University - Gold Coast Campus; Griffith
   University; Griffith University - Gold Coast Campus
RP Palutikof, JP (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Natl Climate Change Adaptat Res Facil, Gold Coast, Qld 4222, Australia.
EM j.palutikof@griffith.edu.au
RI Tonmoy, Fahim/A-1502-2012; Leitch, Anne/D-3033-2011
OI Tonmoy, Fahim/0000-0002-0963-112X; Palutikof, Jean/0000-0002-5248-6925;
   Leitch, Anne/0000-0002-7597-0007
FU Australian Government through the Department of the Environment and
   Energy
FX The authors thank the reviewers for their insightful and constructive
   comments. CoastAdapt was funded by the Australian Government through the
   Department of the Environment and Energy. The views expressed in this
   paper are not necessarily the views of the Commonwealth of Australia and
   the Commonwealth does not accept responsibility for information or
   advice it contains.
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NR 39
TC 17
Z9 17
U1 0
U2 11
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD APR
PY 2019
VL 153
IS 4
SI SI
BP 607
EP 624
DI 10.1007/s10584-018-2177-3
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA HY1US
UT WOS:000467903200010
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cavalcante, RG
   Freitas, MAV
   da Silva, NF
   de Azevedo, FR
AF Cavalcante Junior, Roberto Gomes
   Vasconcelos Freitas, Marcos Aurelio
   da Silva, Neilton Fidelis
   de Azevedo Filho, Franklin Rocha
TI Sustainable Groundwater Exploitation Aiming at the Reduction of Water
   Vulnerability in the Brazilian Semi-Arid Region
SO ENERGIES
LA English
DT Article
DE semiarid; water vulnerability; climate change; desalination; reverse
   osmosis; renewable energy; photovoltaic
ID SEAWATER DESALINATION; SOLAR-ENERGY; SYSTEMS; SCARCITY; TECHNOLOGIES;
   ECONOMICS; RECHARGE; NEXUS; REUSE
AB Semi-arid regions have historically suffered from low water availability. In addition, the increasing frequency and intensity of extreme weather events credited to global climate change has made it increasingly clear that among the challenges faced by society water resource management is extremely necessary. In this context, desalination based on renewable energy resources integrated with production systems that make use of the waste resulting from this process becomes a socio-environmentally indicated alternative to expand existing supply strategies and sustainable water use in isolated locations, and/or areas distant from large urban centers, thus addressing local potential and reducing environmental impacts. This study assesses the use of Photovoltaic Solar Power Plants (PSPPs), as well as of residues generated in a Brackish Water Reverse Osmosis System (BWRO), in productive units linked to fish and family farming. This is as an alternative way to reduce water vulnerability in the Brazilian semi-arid area (BS), adhering to climate change adaptation measures in the light of Brazilian public policies through the Freshwater Program (Programa agua DocePAD), which aims to promote access to good quality water to approximately 500 thousand people in the Brazilian semi-arid region.
C1 [Cavalcante Junior, Roberto Gomes; da Silva, Neilton Fidelis] Inst Educ Sci & Technol IFRN, BR-59015000 Natal, RN, Brazil.
   [Cavalcante Junior, Roberto Gomes; Vasconcelos Freitas, Marcos Aurelio; da Silva, Neilton Fidelis] Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Energy Planning Program PPE, BR-21941914 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
   [Vasconcelos Freitas, Marcos Aurelio; da Silva, Neilton Fidelis] Int Virtual Inst Global Changes, BR-21941909 Rio De Janeiro, Brazil.
   [de Azevedo Filho, Franklin Rocha] Minist Environm Brazil, BR-70000000 Brasilia, DF, Brazil.
C3 Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro
RP Cavalcante, RG (corresponding author), Inst Educ Sci & Technol IFRN, BR-59015000 Natal, RN, Brazil.; Cavalcante, RG (corresponding author), Univ Fed Rio de Janeiro, Energy Planning Program PPE, BR-21941914 Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
EM Roberto.cavalcante@ifrn.edu.br; mfreitas@ppe.ufrj.br;
   neilton@ivig.coppe.ufrj.br; franklinazfilho@gmail.com
RI Freitas, Marcos/GYQ-9960-2022
OI Cavalcante Junior, Roberto Gomes/0000-0003-1130-6622; SILVA, NEILTON
   FIDELIS DA/0000-0003-2117-3894
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NR 96
TC 20
Z9 22
U1 1
U2 20
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1996-1073
J9 ENERGIES
JI Energies
PD MAR 1
PY 2019
VL 12
IS 5
AR 904
DI 10.3390/en12050904
PG 20
WC Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Energy & Fuels
GA HQ8AS
UT WOS:000462646700137
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Adoir, E
   Penavayre, S
   Petitjean, T
   De Rességuier, L
AF Adoir, E.
   Penavayre, S.
   Petitjean, T.
   De Resseguier, L.
BE Roca, P
TI Study of the viticultural technical itineraries carbon footprint at fine
   scale
SO 42ND WORLD CONGRESS OF VINE AND WINE
SE BIO Web of Conferences
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 42nd World Congress of Vine and Wine
CY JUL 15-19, 2019
CL Geneva, SWITZERLAND
AB Viticulture faces two challenges regarding climate change: adapting and mitigating greenhouse gas emissions. Are these two challenges compatible? This is one of the questions to which Adviclim project (Life project, 2014-2019) provided tools and answers. The assessment of greenhouse gas emissions was implemented at the scale of the plot using a life cycle approach: calculating the carbon footprint. This approach makes it possible to take into account the emissions generated during each stage of the life cycle of a product or a service: in this case, the cultivation of one hectare of vine for one year. Carbon footprint was assessed for the 5 pilot sites of the Adviclim project: Saint-Emilion (France), Coteaux du Layon/Samur (France), Geisenheim (Germany), Cotnari (Romania) and Plompton (United Kingdom). An important work for primary data collection regarding observed practices was carried out with a sample of reresentative farms for these 5 sites, and for one to three vintages depending on the site. Beyond the question asked in the project, the calculation of these carbon footprints made it possible to (i) make winegrowers aware of the life cycle approach and the share of direct emissions generated by viticulture, (ii) acquire new references on the technical itineraries and their associated emissions, (iii) improve the adaptation of the methodology for calculating the carbon footprint to viticulture.
C1 [Adoir, E.; Penavayre, S.] Inst Francais Vigne & Vin IFV, Pole Bourgogne Beaujolais Jura Savoie, F-69661 Villefranche, France.
   [Petitjean, T.; De Resseguier, L.] Univ Bordeaux, Bordeaux Sci Agro, INRA, EGFV,ISVV, F-33883 Villenave Dornon, France.
C3 Universite de Bordeaux; INRAE
RP Adoir, E (corresponding author), Inst Francais Vigne & Vin IFV, Pole Bourgogne Beaujolais Jura Savoie, F-69661 Villefranche, France.
CR Goedkoop M., 2009, RECIPE, V2008
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   Wernet G., 2016, INT J LCA, V21
NR 5
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 9
PU E D P SCIENCES
PI CEDEX A
PA 17 AVE DU HOGGAR PARC D ACTIVITES COUTABOEUF BP 112, F-91944 CEDEX A,
   FRANCE
SN 2117-4458
J9 BIO WEB CONF
PY 2019
VL 15
AR 01030
DI 10.1051/bioconf/20191501030
PG 5
WC Food Science & Technology; Horticulture
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Food Science & Technology; Agriculture
GA BO2WJ
UT WOS:000509352700030
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Manunarella, MC
   Grandoni, G
AF Manunarella, Maria Cristina
   Grandoni, Giovanni
TI Resilience actions to counteract the effects of climate change and
   health emergencies in cities: the role of artificial neural networks
SO ANNALI DELL ISTITUTO SUPERIORE DI SANITA
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; climate resilience of health; urban
   resilience actions; health; artificial neural networks
AB Both the World Health Organization (WHO) with its 2015 "Climate and Health Country Profile Project" and the Istituto Superiore di Sanita (ISS) with its 2018 "Health and Climate Change", agree on the emergency generated by the climate change and concerning health problems. The mitigation strategy suggested by the Intergovernmental Panel On Climate Change (IPCC) against greenhouse gas emissions and their effects on climate change, has not yet yielded the desired results. It is therefore necessary to focus on adaptation strategies, to immediately counter the effects of climate change (CC) on most vulnerable people and environments, by increasing their resilience through local interventions and targeted resilience actions. Coordinated resilience actions are necessary to combat the effects of CC especially in urban areas. Useful tools to manage and optimize resilience actions are artificial neural networks (ANN) in complex and dynamic domains as cities are. The case of ANN applied to a city is presented as an example to increase the climate resilience of health local systems. In the current state of knowledge, ANN prove to be the most advanced and global solution to coordinate and manage a set of resilience actions in urban areas.
C1 [Manunarella, Maria Cristina; Grandoni, Giovanni] Agenzia Nazl Nuove Tecnol Energia & Sviluppo Econ, Rome, Italy.
C3 Italian National Agency New Technical Energy & Sustainable Economics
   Development
RP Manunarella, MC (corresponding author), Via Francesco Schupfer 69, I-00167 Rome, Italy.
EM mc.mammarella@gmail.com
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NR 20
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 2
U2 14
PU Istituto Superiore Sanita
PI ROME
PA Viale Regina Elena 299, ROME, ITALY
SN 0021-2571
EI 2384-8553
J9 ANN I SUPER SANITA
JI Ann. Ist. Super. Sanita
PY 2019
VL 55
IS 4
BP 392
EP 397
DI 10.4415/ANN_19_04_14
PG 6
WC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
GA JW9PZ
UT WOS:000503378800014
PM 31850868
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bottero, A
   D'Amato, AW
   Palik, BJ
   Kern, CC
   Bradford, JB
   Scherer, SS
AF Bottero, Alessandra
   D'Amato, Anthony W.
   Palik, Brian J.
   Kern, Christel C.
   Bradford, John B.
   Scherer, Sawyer S.
TI Influence of Repeated Prescribed Fire on Tree Growth and Morialily in
   <i>Pinus resinosa</i> Forests, Northern Minnesota
SO FOREST SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE controlled burns; dendrochronology; drought vulnerability; underburning
ID PONDEROSA PINE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; MORTALITY; IMPACTS; STAND; PROJECTIONS;
   SURROGATE; RESPONSES; HISTORY; ABIES
AB Prescribed fire is widely used for ecological restoration and fuel reduction in fire-dependent ecosystems, most of which are also prone to drought. Despite the importance of drought in fire-adapted forests, little is known about the cumulative effects of repeated prescribed burning on tree growth and related response to drought. Using dendrochronological data in red pine (Pinus resinosa Ait.)-dominated forests in northern Minnesota, USA, we examined growth responses before and after understory prescribed fires between 1960 and 1970 to assess whether repeated burning influences growth responses of overstory trees and vulnerability of overstory tree growth to drought. We found no difference in tree-level growth vulnerability to drought, expressed as growth resistance, resilience, and recovery, between areas receiving prescribed fire treatments and untreated forests. Annual mortality rates during the period of active burning were also low (less than 2%) in all treatments. These findings indicate that prescribed fire can be effectively integrated into management plans and climate change adaptation strategies for red pine forest ecosystems without significant short- or long-term negative consequences for growth or mortality rates of overstory trees.
C1 [Bottero, Alessandra; Scherer, Sawyer S.] Univ Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
   [D'Amato, Anthony W.] Univ Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405 USA.
   [Palik, Brian J.; Kern, Christel C.] US Forest Serv, USDA, Northern Res Stn, Washington, DC 20250 USA.
   [Bradford, John B.] US Geol Survey, 959 Natl Ctr, Reston, VA 22092 USA.
C3 University of Minnesota System; University of Minnesota Twin Cities;
   University of Vermont; United States Department of Agriculture (USDA);
   United States Forest Service; United States Department of the Interior;
   United States Geological Survey
RP Bottero, A (corresponding author), Univ Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455 USA.
EM dr.alessandrabottero@gmail.com
RI D'Amato, Anthony/AAV-3245-2021; Kern, Christel/B-4847-2012; Bottero,
   Alessandra/AAR-8459-2021; Bradford, John/E-5545-2011
OI Palik, Brian/0000-0003-0300-9644; Bradford, John/0000-0001-9257-6303;
   Bottero, Alessandra/0000-0002-0410-2675; Kern,
   Christel/0000-0003-4923-6180
FU USDA Forest Service Northern Research Station; Department of Interior
   Northeast Climate Science Center; Minnesota Agricultural Experiment
   Station
FX We thank A. Bale and D. Kastendick for assistance with data collection
   and processing of tree-ring samples. S. Fraver, the anonymous reviewers,
   and the Associate Editor provided valuable inputs and suggestions that
   helped to improve the content of this article. Funding and logistic
   support was provided by the USDA Forest Service Northern Research
   Station, the Department of Interior Northeast Climate Science Center,
   and the Minnesota Agricultural Experiment Station. Dedicated to Robert
   (Bob) Buckman, whose original research examining prescribed fire effects
   in northern forests made this work possible.
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NR 60
TC 15
Z9 18
U1 2
U2 41
PU OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
PI CARY
PA JOURNALS DEPT, 2001 EVANS RD, CARY, NC 27513 USA
SN 0015-749X
EI 1938-3738
J9 FOREST SCI
JI For. Sci.
PD FEB
PY 2017
VL 63
IS 1
BP 94
EP 100
DI 10.5849/forsci.16-035
PG 7
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA EJ6TF
UT WOS:000393351000010
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Robin, C
   Nudds, S
   MacAulay, P
   Godin, A
   Boom, BD
   Bartlett, J
AF Robin, Catherine
   Nudds, Shannon
   MacAulay, Phillip
   Godin, Andre
   Boom, Bodo De Lange
   Bartlett, Jason
TI Hydrographic Vertical Separation Surfaces (HyVSEPs) for the Tidal Waters
   of Canada
SO MARINE GEODESY
LA English
DT Article
DE Altimetry; geoid; geodetic datum; GNSS; hydrography; modeling; nautical
   chart; tidal constituent
ID COASTAL; MODEL; DATUM
AB Since the advent of Global Navigation Satellite Systems, it has been possible to perform hydrographic survey reductions through the ellipsoid, which has the potential to simplify operations and improve bathymetric products. This technique requires a spatially continuous separation surface connecting chart datum (CD) to a geodetic ellipsoid. The Canadian Hydrographic Service (CHS), with support from the Canadian Geodetic Survey, has developed a new suite of such surfaces, termed Hydrographic Vertical Separations Surfaces, or HyVSEPs, for CD and seven tidal levels. They capture the spatial variability of the tidal datum and levels between tide gauges and offshore using semiempirical models coupling observations at tide stations with relative sea-level rise estimates, dynamic ocean model solutions, satellite altimetry, and a geoid model. HyVSEPs are available for all tidal waters of Canada, covering over seven million square kilometers of ocean and more than 200,000 kilometers of shoreline. This document provides an overview of the CHS's modeling approach, tools, methods, and procedures.The HyVSEP for CD defines the new hydrographic datum for the tidal waters of Canada. HyVSEPs for other tidal levels are fundamental for coastal studies, climate change adaptation and the definition of the Canadian shoreline and offshore boundaries. HyVSEPs for inland waters are not discussed.
C1 [Robin, Catherine] Canadian Geodet Survey, Nat Resources Canada, Ottawa, ON K1A 0Y7, Canada.
   [Nudds, Shannon; MacAulay, Phillip] Canadian Hydrog Serv, Dept Fisheries & Oceans, Dartmouth, NS, Canada.
   [Godin, Andre] Canadian Hydrog Serv, Dept Fisheries & Oceans, Mont Joli, PQ, Canada.
   [Boom, Bodo De Lange] Canadian Hydrog Serv, Dept Fisheries & Oceans, Sidney, BC, Canada.
   [Bartlett, Jason] Canadian Hydrog Serv, Dept Fisheries & Oceans, Burlington, ON, Canada.
C3 Natural Resources Canada; Lands & Minerals Sector - Natural Resources
   Canada; Surveyor General Branch - Geomatics Canada; Fisheries & Oceans
   Canada; Fisheries & Oceans Canada; Fisheries & Oceans Canada; Fisheries
   & Oceans Canada
RP Robin, C (corresponding author), Canadian Geodet Survey, 588 Booth St, Ottawa, ON K1A 0Y7, Canada.
EM Catherine.Robin@canada.ca
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NR 45
TC 13
Z9 15
U1 1
U2 9
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
PI PHILADELPHIA
PA 530 WALNUT STREET, STE 850, PHILADELPHIA, PA 19106 USA
SN 0149-0419
EI 1521-060X
J9 MAR GEOD
JI Mar. Geod.
PY 2016
VL 39
IS 2
BP 195
EP 222
DI 10.1080/01490419.2016.1160011
PG 28
WC Geochemistry & Geophysics; Oceanography; Remote Sensing
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geochemistry & Geophysics; Oceanography; Remote Sensing
GA DJ9UR
UT WOS:000374559000005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Grecksch, K
AF Grecksch, Kevin
TI Adaptive capacity and water governance in the Keiskamma River Catchment,
   Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
SO WATER SA
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptive capacity; Adaptive Capacity Wheel (ACW); climate change
   adaptation; South Africa; water governance
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; MANAGEMENT
AB South Africa, being a semi-arid country, faces water resource constraints. The projected impacts of climate change in the Keiskamma River Catchment, Eastern Cape Province, are, for example, changes in rainfall with effects on streamflow, salt water intrusion, decreasing water quality due to runoff and erosion, and droughts. This paper uses an existing framework, the Adaptive Capacity Wheel (ACW), complemented by two additional dimensions: adaptation motivation and adaptation belief. The objectives were, first, to assess the adaptive capacity of water governance in the study region, and, second, to show how the ACW can be used as an approach and a communication tool with stakeholders to identify strengths and weaknesses. Based on this, recommendations can be drawn that could help water experts and stakeholders in the future. The results depict a 'medium' score for adaptive capacity. However, it is important to look closely at each dimension assessed by the ACW. The key recommendations are: to overcome the implementation gap, to ensure better coordination across and within governmental levels; to raise awareness, capacity and skill among decision makers and the public; and to increase the political will to overcome adaptation barriers.
C1 Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Dept Econ & Law, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
C3 Carl von Ossietzky Universitat Oldenburg
RP Grecksch, K (corresponding author), Carl von Ossietzky Univ Oldenburg, Dept Econ & Law, Ammerlander Heerstr 114-118, D-26129 Oldenburg, Germany.
EM kevin.grecksch@uni-oldenburg.de
RI Grecksch, Kevin/AAA-1826-2021
OI Grecksch, Kevin/0000-0002-1913-0134
FU German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD); project 'Clim-A-Net
FX This research was funded by the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
   and the project 'Clim-A-Net. The North-South Network on Climate Proofing
   of Vulnerable Regions'. I would like to especially thank all interviewed
   experts.
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NR 50
TC 14
Z9 20
U1 0
U2 24
PU WATER RESEARCH COMMISSION
PI PRETORIA
PA PO BOX 824, PRETORIA 0001, SOUTH AFRICA
SN 0378-4738
EI 1816-7950
J9 WATER SA
JI Water SA
PD APR
PY 2015
VL 41
IS 3
BP 359
EP 368
DI 10.4314/wsa.v41i3.07
PG 10
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Water Resources
GA CL4QX
UT WOS:000356939400007
OA Green Submitted, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Busby, JW
   Smith, TG
   Krishnan, N
AF Busby, Joshua W.
   Smith, Todd G.
   Krishnan, Nisha
TI Climate security vulnerability in Africa mapping 3.0
SO POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Security; Disasters
ID NATURAL HAZARDS; CONFLICT; HOTSPOTS; INDICATORS; RESILIENCE; CAPACITY
AB Climate change is expected to have severe consequences on the lives and livelihoods of millions of people around the world, but its effects will not be evenly distributed. Africa is thought to be especially vulnerable, given both high exposure to climate change and relatively low community resilience and governance capabilities. With climate change adaptation looming ever larger as an important policy area, understanding where climate vulnerabilities are located therefore has immense practical significance. This article details the methodological refinements made to an existing model of climate security vulnerability, the rationale for the approach, and the findings. The model introduces more fine-grained data and new methods of normalizing the data to retain more granularity, as well as other changes. The vulnerability maps show the Horn of Africa (Somalia in particular), South Sudan, the eastern coasts of Madagascar and Mozambique, northern Nigeria and southern Mali, Burundi, Sierra Leone and Guinea, as well as pockets along rivers and coasts in Egypt and Nigeria to be the most vulnerable. For validation, the model is also compared to maps of climate-related disaster counts, fatalities, and affected populations derived from the EM-DAT International Disaster database. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Busby, Joshua W.; Smith, Todd G.; Krishnan, Nisha] Univ Texas Austin, LBJ Sch Publ Affairs, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
C3 University of Texas System; University of Texas Austin
RP Busby, JW (corresponding author), Univ Texas Austin, LBJ Sch Publ Affairs, Austin, TX 78712 USA.
EM busbyj@utexas.edu
OI Krishnan, Nisha/0000-0002-2547-1330
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NR 109
TC 54
Z9 59
U1 3
U2 78
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0962-6298
EI 1873-5096
J9 POLIT GEOGR
JI Polit. Geogr.
PD NOV
PY 2014
VL 43
SI SI
BP 51
EP 67
DI 10.1016/j.polgeo.2014.10.005
PG 17
WC Geography; Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Government & Law
GA AX6HO
UT WOS:000347023800006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Regmi, BR
   Star, C
AF Regmi, Bimal Raj
   Star, Cassandra
TI Identifying operational mechanisms for mainstreaming community-based
   adaptation in Nepal
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Nepal; mainstreaming; community-based adaptation; climate change
   adaptation
ID DEVELOPING-COUNTRIES; DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE; CLIMATE-CHANGE;
   DECENTRALIZATION
AB Mainstreaming is a feasible and viable option for scaling up initiatives on community-based adaptation (CBA) to climate change. However, there is little evidence on how to get CBA mainstreaming feasible and to work effectively. This paper aims to investigate two major questions: (1) what kind of policies favour mainstreaming CBA; and (2) what kinds of approaches or practices are required to operationalize CBA mainstreaming in the case of Nepal? The field research for this paper was conducted in the Dhading, Nawalparasi and Pyuthan districts of Nepal. The research used a mix of approaches and methods for data generation and analysis. The findings reveal that policies to operationalize CBA mainstreaming should build on past policy successes and include community-centric provisions that empower local institutions and encourage them to practice inclusive decision-making and benefit-sharing mechanisms. One lesson from this analysis of the practices of mainstreaming in Nepal is that an integrated co-management approach to mainstreaming is necessary to overcome the barriers related to knowledge, finance and technology. It is concluded that the operational mechanisms of mainstreaming CBA in development should have an inclusive local structure and be responsive to national policies and governance arrangements.
C1 [Regmi, Bimal Raj; Star, Cassandra] Flinders Univ S Australia, Fac Social & Behav Sci, Sch Social & Policy Studies, Discipline Polit & Publ Policy, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
C3 Flinders University South Australia
RP Regmi, BR (corresponding author), Flinders Univ S Australia, Fac Social & Behav Sci, Sch Social & Policy Studies, Discipline Polit & Publ Policy, GPO Box 2100, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia.
EM regm0003@flinders.edu.au
OI Star, Cassandra/0000-0003-2648-6603
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NR 42
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 0
U2 23
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD OCT 2
PY 2014
VL 6
IS 4
SI SI
BP 306
EP 317
DI 10.1080/17565529.2014.977760
PG 12
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AS7YF
UT WOS:000344467100003
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lof, A
AF Lof, Annette
TI Examining limits and barriers to climate change adaptation in an
   Indigenous reindeer herding community
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; adaptation; governance; reindeer herding; reindeer
   husbandry; Indigenous; Sami; participation
ID ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; NATIONAL LEVEL; VULNERABILITY; GOVERNANCE;
   CHALLENGES; MANAGEMENT
AB Based on recognized gaps in adaptation research the article begins by identifying the need to empirically investigate the governance of adaptation'. Drawing on Kooiman's interactive governance framework, the study examines through collaborative methodology how adaptation agency and the space for adaptation is constructed and restricted in the case of an Indigenous reindeer herding community in Sweden. Findings demonstrate that climate change and variability is currently a matter of concern. The greatest problem, however, is the diminishing space for adaptation due to accumulated pressure of predation and competing land-uses in combination with herders' lack of direct and indirect power to influence the actors and institutional factors currently limiting adaptation options. This study carries relevance not only for reindeer herding communities in Sweden, but also for the general adaptation literature in demonstrating that limits and barriers to adaptation can be essentially political; requiring the making of hard choices and hence active governmental intervention. It also shows that marginalized groups, even in contexts where adaptive capacity is considered high, are likely to remain highly vulnerable with restricted adaptation opportunities unless deliberate structural and institutional transformation are initiated.
C1 Umea Univ, Dept Polit Sci, S-90187 Umea, Sweden.
C3 Umea University
RP Lof, A (corresponding author), Umea Univ, Dept Polit Sci, S-90187 Umea, Sweden.
EM Annette.lof@pol.umu.se
RI Löf, Annette/HBD-9315-2022
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NR 64
TC 29
Z9 30
U1 1
U2 62
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD OCT 1
PY 2013
VL 5
IS 4
BP 328
EP 339
DI 10.1080/17565529.2013.831338
PG 12
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 222JC
UT WOS:000324726000007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Boelee, E
   Yohannes, M
   Poda, JN
   McCartney, M
   Cecchi, P
   Kibret, S
   Hagos, F
   Laamrani, H
AF Boelee, Eline
   Yohannes, Mekonnen
   Poda, Jean-Noel
   McCartney, Matthew
   Cecchi, Philippe
   Kibret, Solomon
   Hagos, Fitsum
   Laamrani, Hammou
TI Options for water storage and rainwater harvesting to improve health and
   resilience against climate change in Africa
SO REGIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Water storage; Health; Climate change; Africa; Small reservoirs; Water
   harvesting
ID MALARIA TRANSMISSION; NORTHERN ETHIOPIA; SCHISTOSOMIASIS; IMPACT; DAMS;
   PARTICIPATION; INFECTION; HIGHLANDS; TIGRAY; BURDEN
AB West and East Africa experience high variability of rainfall that is expected to increase with climate change. This results in fluctuations in water availability for food production and other socioeconomic activities. Water harvesting and storage can mitigate the adverse effects of rainfall variability. But past studies have shown that when investments in water storage are not guided by environmental health considerations, the increased availability of open water surface may increase the transmission of water-related diseases. This is demonstrated for schistosomiasis associated with small reservoirs in Burkina Faso, and for malaria in Ethiopia around large dams, small dams, and water harvesting ponds. The concern is that the rush to develop water harvesting and storage for climate change adaptation may increase the risk for already vulnerable people, in some cases more than canceling out the benefits of greater water availability. Taking health issues into account in a participatory approach to planning, design, and management of rainwater harvesting and water storage, as well as considering the full range of water storage options would enable better opportunities for enhancing resilience against climate change in vulnerable populations in sub-Saharan Africa.
C1 [Boelee, Eline] IWMI, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
   [Yohannes, Mekonnen] Mekelle Univ, Mekelle, Ethiopia.
   [Poda, Jean-Noel] CNRST, IRSS, Ouagadougou, Burkina Faso.
   [McCartney, Matthew; Hagos, Fitsum] IWMI, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
   [Cecchi, Philippe] IRD UMR G EAU, IRD, Montpellier, France.
   [Kibret, Solomon] Univ Addis Ababa, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
   [Laamrani, Hammou] IDRC, Cairo, Egypt.
C3 CGIAR; International Water Management Institute (IWMI); Mekelle
   University; Institut de Recherche pour le Developpement (IRD); Addis
   Ababa University; Egyptian Knowledge Bank (EKB); Desert Research Center
   (DRC)
RP Boelee, E (corresponding author), IWMI, Colombo, Sri Lanka.
EM e.boelee@waterhealth.nl
RI Hagos, Fitsum/HPE-9562-2023; Kibret, Solomon/I-7770-2019
OI Brihanie, Solomon Kibret/0000-0003-1793-6908; Hagos,
   Fitsum/0000-0002-1388-7136; Boelee, Eline/0000-0001-7660-5602
FU Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on
   behalf of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and
   Development (BMZ) as part of its research program on Adaptation of
   African Agriculture to Climate Change; CGIAR Challenge Program on Water
   and Food (CPWF); Canadian International Development Research Centre
   (IDRC); CGIAR Systemwide Initiative on Malaria and Agriculture (SIMA);
   Poverty Reduction and Environmental Management (PREM) Programme of the
   Netherlands government
FX This paper was prepared as one of the outputs in a project entitled
   "Rethinking water storage for climate change adaptation in sub-Saharan
   Africa," funded by the Deutsche Gesellschaft fur Internationale
   Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH on behalf of the German Federal Ministry for
   Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) as part of its research
   program on Adaptation of African Agriculture to Climate Change. Earlier
   studies were funded through a variety of projects and donors, including
   the CGIAR Challenge Program on Water and Food (CPWF), the Canadian
   International Development Research Centre (IDRC), the CGIAR Systemwide
   Initiative on Malaria and Agriculture (SIMA), and the Poverty Reduction
   and Environmental Management (PREM) Programme of the Netherlands
   government. We thank our collaborators in the various studies, in
   particular Abderrahmane Ait Lhaj, Gayathri Jayasinghe, Andre Kone,
   Jonathan Lautze, Henry Madsen, Clifford Mutero, and Dramane Zongo. In
   addition, we thank the reviewers and Pay Drechsel for their constructive
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NR 48
TC 57
Z9 62
U1 0
U2 77
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 1436-3798
EI 1436-378X
J9 REG ENVIRON CHANGE
JI Reg. Envir. Chang.
PD JUN
PY 2013
VL 13
IS 3
SI SI
BP 509
EP 519
DI 10.1007/s10113-012-0287-4
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 155UW
UT WOS:000319774800004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Few, R
   Brown, K
   Tompkins, EL
AF Few, Roger
   Brown, Katrina
   Tompkins, Emma L.
TI Public participation and climate change adaptation: Avoiding the
   illusion of inclusion
SO CLIMATE POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; participation; inclusion; coastal zone; managerialism;
   power; stakeholder involvement; anticipatory; strategies
ID NATURAL-RESOURCE MANAGEMENT; COASTAL MANAGEMENT; POLICY; STAKEHOLDERS;
   CONSERVATION; APPRAISAL; POLITICS
AB Public participation is commonly advocated in policy responses to climate change. Here we discuss prospects for inclusive approaches to adaptation, drawing particularly on studies of long-term coastal management in the UK and elsewhere. We affirm that public participation is an important normative goal in formulating response to climate change risks, but argue that its practice must learn from existing critiques of participatory processes in other contexts. Involving a wide range of stakeholders in decision-making presents fundamental challenges for climate policy, many of which are embedded in relations of power. In the case of anticipatory responses to climate change, these challenges are magnified because of the long-term and uncertain nature of the problem. Without due consideration of these issues, a tension between principles of public participation and anticipatory adaptation is likely to emerge and may result in an overly managed form of inclusion that is unlikely to satisfy either participatory or instrumental goals. Alternative, more narrowly instrumental, approaches to participation are more likely to succeed in this context, as long as the scope and limitations of public involvement are made explicit from the outset.
C1 Univ E Anglia, Sch Dev Studies, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   Univ E Anglia, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   Univ Oxford, Ctr Environm, Oxford OX1 3QY, England.
C3 University of East Anglia; University of East Anglia; University of
   Oxford
RP Few, R (corresponding author), Univ E Anglia, Sch Dev Studies, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
EM r.few@uea.ac.uk
RI Few, Roger/AAT-3914-2021; Tompkins, Emma/B-6863-2016
OI Tompkins, Emma/0000-0002-4825-9797
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NR 55
TC 441
Z9 492
U1 4
U2 148
PU JAMES & JAMES SCIENCE PUBLISHERS LTD/EARTHSCAN
PI LONDON
PA 8-12 CAMDEN HIGH STREET, NW1 0JH LONDON, ENGLAND
SN 1469-3062
J9 CLIM POLICY
JI Clim. Policy
PY 2007
VL 7
IS 1
BP 46
EP 59
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA 230DJ
UT WOS:000250855700004
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bajestani, SA
   Serrao-Neumann, S
   Hanna, C
   Fu, XY
AF Bajestani, Sepideh Afsari
   Serrao-Neumann, Silvia
   Hanna, Christina
   Fu, Xinyu
TI Dealing with uncertainty in flood risk management and land use planning
   decisions: Insights from Aotearoa New Zealand
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Spatial planning; Natural hazards; Flood risk governance; Climate change
   adaptation; Risk communication
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; IMPACT ASSESSMENTS; POLICY; ADAPTATION; SCIENCE
AB Flooding with increasing intensity and frequency is presenting significant challenges for risk management and land use planning in urban areas. This is further exacerbated by uncertainties regarding how flood patterns are changing because of climate change. However, how such uncertainties are considered to inform flood risk management and land use planning decisions can vary largely from place to place and remain unclear in the literature. This paper contributes to this by examining how uncertainty is dealt with in flood risk management and land use planning in Aotearoa New Zealand. Drawing on empirical data at the local level, findings indicate that Aotearoa New Zealand's decision-makers face challenges in considering and communicating uncertainty due to the prevalence of outdated approaches and regulatory constraints, fragmented risk governance, and lack of appropriate understanding of different perceptions and assumptions regarding flood risk between different stakeholders. Based on findings, the paper discusses the critical role of a national-level adaptive flood risk governance in helping to ensure consistency and coherency across different jurisdictions and levels of government, regarding the incorporation of uncertainty into flood risk management and land use planning. This includes the provision of national directives for incorporating uncertainty in decision-making whilst leaving room for innovation and targeted variability at the local level.
C1 [Bajestani, Sepideh Afsari; Serrao-Neumann, Silvia; Hanna, Christina; Fu, Xinyu] Univ Waikato, Sch Social Sci, Hamilton, New Zealand.
   [Bajestani, Sepideh Afsari] Victoria Univ Wellington, Sch Architecture, Wellington, New Zealand.
C3 University of Waikato; Victoria University Wellington
RP Bajestani, SA (corresponding author), Victoria Univ Wellington, Sch Architecture, Wellington, New Zealand.
EM sepideh.afsaribajestani@vuw.ac.nz
RI Fu, Xinyu/ABA-6804-2020
FU New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment (MBIE)
   Endeavour Fund through the National Institute of Water and Atmospheric
   Research (NIWA) [C01X2014]
FX This work was supported by the New Zealand Ministry of Business,
   Innovation, and Employment (MBIE) Endeavour Fund through the National
   Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research (NIWA) programme Mate
   haumaru onga puna wai o Rakaihautu ka ora mo ake tonu: Increasing flood
   resilience across Aotearoa (contract C01X2014) .
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NR 63
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2024
VL 46
AR 100666
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2024.100666
EA NOV 2024
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA N1J5P
UT WOS:001361978900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carlone, T
   Mannocchi, M
AF Carlone, Teresa
   Mannocchi, Matteo
TI Overcoming Barriers and Fostering Adoption: Evaluating the Institutional
   Mainstreaming of Nature-Based Solutions in the Emilia-Romagna Region's
   Socio-Ecological System
SO LAND
LA English
DT Article
DE nature-based solutions; socio-ecological system; technical culture;
   qualitative research
ID SCIENCE
AB International organizations like the EU and IUCN are advocating for nature-based solutions (NBSs) as green alternatives for climate change adaptation and mitigation, especially in disaster risk reduction and urban planning. The H2020 OPERANDUM project was designed to address the major hydro-meteorological risks (floods, droughts, landslides, storm surge, and coastal erosions) through the deployment and assessment of NBSs in different contexts and areas affected by specific hazards. Despite growing research and funding, NBSs are still in the early stages of mainstream adoption and face challenges in acceptance and dissemination. Although designed to benefit both social and ecological systems, they remain a niche area with low perceived effectiveness among technicians and decision-makers. Their uptake requires a paradigm shift that includes a change in cultural-cognitive institutions, a different and wider set of knowledge than traditional engineering (ecological, social), and an adaptive management approach, missing within the current governance system. Using a qualitative case study research method, this paper aims to identify barriers in mainstreaming NBSs for DRR (disaster risk reduction) in the Emilia-Romagna region-influenced not only by individual beliefs but also by variables tied to technical culture and local procedural norms-and emphasizing the importance of combining social and ecological indicators in socio-ecological system analysis.
C1 [Carlone, Teresa] Univ Bologna, Dept Sociol & Business Law, I-40125 Bologna, Italy.
   [Mannocchi, Matteo] Univ Bologna, Dept Polit & Social Sci, I-40125 Bologna, Italy.
C3 University of Bologna; University of Bologna
RP Carlone, T (corresponding author), Univ Bologna, Dept Sociol & Business Law, I-40125 Bologna, Italy.
EM teresa.carlone2@unibo.it; matteo.mannocchi2@unibo.it
OI CARLONE, TERESA/0000-0002-7300-3945
FU European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program [776848];
   European Union
FX This research was funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research
   and innovation program with the project OPERANDUM "Open-Air-laboratories
   for Nature-Based solutions to manage hydro-meteo risks" grant agreement
   No 776848, coordinated by Prof. Silvana Di Sabatino (UNIBO). The authors
   are most grateful to those who have actively collaborated in this
   research, lending their time, expertise, and sharing important
   reflections with the authors on the topic of NBS and DDR. A heartfelt
   thanks to Professor Silvana Di Sabatino for the valuable research and
   training opportunity provided by the OPERANDUM project.
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NR 35
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 1
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-445X
J9 LAND-BASEL
JI Land
PD AUG
PY 2024
VL 13
IS 8
AR 1175
DI 10.3390/land13081175
PG 14
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA E7S3A
UT WOS:001304961100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Suárez, M
   Benayas, J
   Justel, A
   Sisto, R
   Montes, C
   Sanz-Casado, E
AF Suarez, Marta
   Benayas, Javier
   Justel, Ana
   Sisto, Raffaele
   Montes, Carlos
   Sanz-Casado, Elias
TI A holistic index-based framework to assess urban resilience: Application
   to the Madrid Region, Spain
SO ECOLOGICAL INDICATORS
LA English
DT Article
DE Composite indicator; Resilient city; Social-ecological justice;
   Sustainable development goals; Urban sustainability
ID SUSTAINABILITY; TRANSFORMATION; COMMUNITY; SYSTEMS; AREAS
AB Resilience is considered to be a component of sustainability and is addressed in the 17 Sustainable Development Goals adopted by all United Nations Member States. Resilience in this context is mainly oriented to climate change adaptation and disaster risk reduction. However, a holistic approach, considering urban systems as a whole and resilience to all kind of disturbances, is needed for a better understanding of the complexity of urban resilience. To advance in this direction we have proposed an Urban Resilience Index and applied it to 81 cities in the Madrid Region, Spain. The index comprises 42 indicators that measure six resilience characteristics: diversity, self-sufficiency and autonomy, polycentric governance, social cohesion, learning and innovation, and social-ecological justice, in five urban dimensions: socio-cultural, economic, ecological, physical and technological, and governance system. Our results showed that the ecological dimension in the Madrid Region is largely determined by the geomorphological characteristics and the associated ecosystems, but municipalities compensate it with resilience strategies focused on social and physical aspects. The most resilient municipalities are also in general the most sustainable, but not always. We propose to use the Urban Resilience Index in combination with the Sustainable Development Goals Index to develop resilient strategies towards sustainability.
C1 [Suarez, Marta; Benayas, Javier; Montes, Carlos] Univ Autonoma Madrid, Dept Ecol, Social Ecol Syst Lab, C-Darwin 2, Madrid 28049, Spain.
   [Suarez, Marta] Univ Basque Country UPV, UNESCO Chair Sustainable Dev & Environm Educ, EHU, Barrio Sarriena S-N, Leioa 48940, Spain.
   [Justel, Ana] Univ Autonoma Madrid, Dept Math, C-Francisco Tomas & Valiente,7, Madrid 28049, Spain.
   [Sisto, Raffaele] Smart &City Solut, C-Hermosilla 48 5 D, Madrid 28001, Spain.
   [Sanz-Casado, Elias] Univ Autonoma Madrid, Res Inst Higher Educ & Sci INAECU, C-Madrid 126, Getafe 28903, Spain.
   [Sanz-Casado, Elias] Univ Carlos III Madrid, C-Madrid 126, Getafe 28903, Spain.
C3 Autonomous University of Madrid; University of Basque Country;
   Autonomous University of Madrid; Autonomous University of Madrid;
   Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
RP Benayas, J (corresponding author), Univ Autonoma Madrid, Dept Ecol, Social Ecol Syst Lab, C-Darwin 2, Madrid 28049, Spain.
EM marta.suarez@inv.uam.es; javier.benayas@uam.es; ana.justel@uam.es;
   raffaele.sisto@smartandcity.com; carlos.montes@uam.es; elias@bib.uc3m.es
RI Justel, Ana/A-3955-2010
FU European Social Fund; SmartCity Solutions; Pedro Martin
FX This research has been financed by the Program H2019/HUM-5744
   CM-INCLUSIVA-CM, in the 2019 call for grants for R&D projects in social
   sciences and humanities of the Community of Madrid co-financed by the
   European Social Fund. We thank Smart&City Solutions and Pedro Martin for
   their support with indicators development and calculations.
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NR 66
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 23
U2 23
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1470-160X
EI 1872-7034
J9 ECOL INDIC
JI Ecol. Indic.
PD SEP
PY 2024
VL 166
DI 10.1016/j.ecolind.2024.112293
EA JUL 2024
PG 12
WC Biodiversity Conservation; Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Biodiversity & Conservation; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA XS3R0
UT WOS:001263631600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Shams, H
   Khan, A
   Haleem, K
   Mahmood, S
AF Shams, Hedayatullah
   Khan, Asif
   Haleem, Kashif
   Mahmood, Saqib
TI Assessing the effects of climate and land-use change on flood recurrence
   in Kokcha River, Afghanistan
SO JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE CA-ANN model; climate change; CMIP6; land-use change; SWAT model
ID MODEL SIMULATIONS; BIAS CORRECTION; COVER CHANGE; IMPACTS; BASIN; RISK
AB This study critically assesses the combined effects of climate and land-use change on flood recurrence in the Kokcha River, Afghanistan, spanning the period from 2010 to 2021 and projecting forward to 2088-2099. Through the application of a bias-corrected model, we achieved high accuracy in temperature and precipitation simulations, with notable NSE values of 0.9 and 0.69, and R2 values of 0.92 and 0.78, respectively. Future streamflow simulations under different scenarios highlight climate change as the major driver influencing flood recurrence in the Kokcha River, contributing to 101.1% of the total variation, while land-use change has a minimal contribution of -1.1%. Our analysis of precipitation, average temperature, and streamflow data reveals significant patterns and changes, with future projections indicating a gradual decline in precipitation levels, mean temperature, and streamflow. Flood frequency analysis for return periods of 10, 50, 100, 200, and 500 years, considering different scenarios, underscores the likelihood of floods of varying magnitudes. Notably, the highest streamflow spikes under both scenarios highlight the impact of futuristic air temperature and precipitation on flood recurrence. The study advocates prioritizing climate change adaptation and resilient land-use strategies to ensure sustainable water resource management, emphasizing the mitigation of potential flood risks.
C1 [Shams, Hedayatullah] Univ Engn & Technol Peshawar, Dept Civil Engn, Peshawar 25000, Pakistan.
   [Khan, Asif] Univ Engn & Technol Peshawar Jalozai Campus, Dept Civil Engn, Jallozai 24240, Pakistan.
   [Haleem, Kashif] Univ Engn & Technol, Natl Inst Urban Infrastruct Planning, Peshawar 25000, Pakistan.
   [Mahmood, Saqib] Univ Engn & Technol Peshawar Bannu Campus, Dept Civil Engn, Bannu 28100, Pakistan.
C3 University of Peshawar; University of Engineering & Technology Peshawar
RP Shams, H (corresponding author), Univ Engn & Technol Peshawar, Dept Civil Engn, Peshawar 25000, Pakistan.
EM heda.shams@gmail.com
OI , Kashif Haleem/0000-0002-3025-8593
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NR 44
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 3
PU IWA PUBLISHING
PI LONDON
PA REPUBLIC-EXPORT BLDG, UNITS 1 04 & 1 05, 1 CLOVE CRESCENT, LONDON,
   ENGLAND
SN 2040-2244
EI 2408-9354
J9 J WATER CLIM CHANGE
JI J. Water Clim. Chang.
PD MAY
PY 2024
VL 15
IS 5
BP 2464
EP 2483
DI 10.2166/wcc.2024.043
EA MAY 2024
PG 20
WC Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Water Resources
GA SS0Q2
UT WOS:001217166000001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Falzon, D
AF Falzon, Danielle
TI How to track progress on the Global Goal on Adaptation?: a stocktaking
   of Parties' positions on measurement one year into the GlaSS work
   programme
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Global Goal on Adaptation; UNFCCC; measurement; indicators; finance;
   climate change
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; ORGANIZATIONAL PATH DEPENDENCE; POLITICS;
   INDICATORS
AB In 2021, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change initiated a two-year work programme that, in part, would work to determine how to assess progress in achieving the Global Goal on Adaptation (GGA). Set in the 2015 Paris Agreement, the GGA aims to "enhance[e] adaptive capacity, [strengthen] resilience, and reduc[e] vulnerability to climate change." One possible outcome of the "GlaSS" work programme is the production of a set of global metrics for adaptation. As scholarship on measurement reveals, however, there are many shortcomings to indicator frameworks, and existing sets of global goals, such as the Sustainable Development Goals, have proven ineffective in producing substantive change. As the inception of institutional architectures is a critical moment in understanding their effects, this study takes stock of the GlaSS at its halfway point. While "developing" and "developed" countries diverge in their preferences for metrics, they converge in their desire for the metrics to be scientifically-grounded and based on existing models and data. These countries' differences reflect the broader politics of accountability and challenges of consensus in climate change governance. Their similarities risk reproducing problematic measurement practices critiqued in the literature. At stake is effective adaptation in the world's most vulnerable communities.
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C3 Rutgers University System; Rutgers University New Brunswick
RP Falzon, D (corresponding author), Rutgers State Univ, Dept Sociol, New Brunswick, NJ 08901 USA.
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NR 49
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 3
U2 5
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD NOV 25
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 10
SI SI
BP 871
EP 880
DI 10.1080/17565529.2024.2326852
EA MAR 2024
PG 10
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA O2M6N
UT WOS:001181096700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Garimella, PP
   Prakash, A
AF Garimella, Pranav Prakhyat
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TI Sustainable socio-ecological transformations in agriculture: cases from
   South Asia
SO JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Transformation; adaptation; South Asia; communities; climate change
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY;
   RESILIENCE
AB Climate change is becoming a defining factor for communities in South Asia. Forming one-fifth of the world population, the region increasingly faces climate-induced disasters such as floods, droughts, heatwaves, cyclones etc. This region also has one of the world's poorest people who struggle to cope with the rapidly changing climatic conditions. Agriculture still employs many people in the region, one of the worst-hit sectors. Agriculture will become untenable in some parts of the region due to climate change. Monsoon patterns have changed, and agriculture does not guarantee sustainable income for the vast majority. Many climate change adaptations have been initiated in the region in response to the threat of climate change. Scholars and practitioners feel that these adaptations must be transformative to be effective. In this paper, we examine eight such adaptations from three South Asian Countries - Bangladesh, India, and Nepal, from the lens of transformative adaptation. We found that no single adaptation initiative meets all the criteria for sustainable socio-ecological transformations. However, there is a significant overlap between different typologies of transformation as envisaged in the paper and literature. We conclude that the concept of socio-ecological transformation is new for South Asia, so integrating it into the programmes and policies is the need of the hour.
C1 [Garimella, Pranav Prakhyat; Prakash, Anjal] Indian Sch Business, Bharti Inst Publ Policy, Mohali, India.
   [Garimella, Pranav Prakhyat] Indian Sch Business, Bharti Inst Publ Policy, 10-2-276-2West Marredpally, Secunderabad 500026, Telangana, India.
C3 Indian School of Business (ISB); Indian School of Business (ISB)
RP Garimella, PP (corresponding author), Indian Sch Business, Bharti Inst Publ Policy, 10-2-276-2West Marredpally, Secunderabad 500026, Telangana, India.
EM pranav.garimella88@gmail.com
RI Prakash, Anjal/AEM-3265-2022
FU World Resources Institute India
FX Pranav Prakhyat Garimella has changed affiliation to World Resources
   Institute India where he currently works as a Program Manager. The
   author is grateful to the organisation for the time and resources
   provided to complete the review process and publish the article. The
   authors thank the Bharti Institute of Public Policy, Indian School of
   Business for providing support in terms of time and resources to
   undertake research and write the article.
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NR 51
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 1
U2 14
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1943-815X
EI 1943-8168
J9 J INTEGR ENVIRON SCI
JI J. Integr. Environ. Sci.
PD DEC 31
PY 2023
VL 20
IS 1
AR 2228393
DI 10.1080/1943815X.2023.2228393
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA L2ZI3
UT WOS:001021987800001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Flores-Pacheco, JA
   Jo, SEC
   Urbina, JCA
   Hodgson, DAC
   Julian, LK
AF Flores-Pacheco, Juan Asdrubal
   Jo, Socrates Esteban Castro
   Urbina, Julio Cesar Arauz
   Hodgson, Denis Alejandro Cash
   Julian, Leonzo Knight
TI Construction systems, integrated disaster risk management & climate
   change adaptation- Tiktik Kaanu indigenous community
SO NEXO REVISTA CIENTIFICA
LA Spanish
DT Article
DE Management; community; humid tropics
AB The Caribbean Coast of Nicaragua is a pluricultural and multilingual region where diverse cultures coexist: Miskito, Sumu-Mayangna and Rama indigenous peoples, Afro-descendant Kriol and Garifuna communities and mestizo communities. This makes the Caribbean one of the richest areas in terms of cultural diversity and identity. It is a fact that the acceleration of climate change variability is a global problem that affects everyone, but differently and that its effects are evident in Nicaragua and mainly in the Caribbean Coast and these will begin to impact many aspects of life. The native peoples and ethnic communities of the region face particular vulnerabilities and risks in the face of the threats caused by climate change. The causes and consequences are understood in different ways, depending on the vision of nature that different cultures have, ranging from perceptions of changes in the environment to predict weather and climate fluctuations to highly described and orally documented variations in climate patterns. The ethnographic study in the Tiktik Kaanu community, Bluefields Municipality, South Coast Autonomous Region, Republic of Nicaragua, aims to describe the ethnicity, culture and construction systems in disaster risk conditions in the community of Tiktik Kaanu, located 42 kilometers south of Bluefields on the banks of the Kukra River, as part of the research and extension sections of the referred subproject.
C1 [Flores-Pacheco, Juan Asdrubal] Bluefields Indian & Caribbean Univ BICU, Direcc Invest & Postgrad DIP, Apartado postal N 88,Ave Univ, Bluefields, Nicaragua.
   [Jo, Socrates Esteban Castro; Urbina, Julio Cesar Arauz; Hodgson, Denis Alejandro Cash] Bluefields Indian & Caribbean Univ BICU, Escuela Ingeniera Civil, Apartado Postal 88, Ave Univ, Bluefields, Nicaragua.
   [Julian, Leonzo Knight] Consejo Supremo Electoral, Contiguo Metroctr, Pista Juan Pablo II, Managua, Nicaragua.
RP Flores-Pacheco, JA (corresponding author), Bluefields Indian & Caribbean Univ BICU, Direcc Invest & Postgrad DIP, Apartado postal N 88,Ave Univ, Bluefields, Nicaragua.
EM asdrubal.flores@do.bicu.edu.ni; socrates.castro@bicu.edu.ni;
   julio.arauz@do.bicu.edu.ni; denis.cash@bicu.edu.ni;
   knight.leonzo@gmail.com
RI Flores Pacheco, Juan Asdrúbal/F-1290-2016
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NR 20
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 1
U2 4
PU UNIV NACL INGENIERIA
PI MANAGUA
PA PO BOX 5595, MANAGUA, 00000, NICARAGUA
SN 1818-6742
EI 1995-9516
J9 NEXO REV CIENT
JI Nexo Rev. Cient.
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 36
IS 4
BP 458
EP 469
DI 10.5377/nexo.v36i04.16749
PG 12
WC Engineering, Multidisciplinary
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Engineering
GA X7ML5
UT WOS:001100246300001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kissi, AE
   Villamor, GB
   Abbey, GA
AF Kissi, Abravi Essenam
   Villamor, Grace B.
   Abbey, Georges Abbevi
TI Ecosystem-Based Adaptation Practices of Smallholder Farmers in the Oti
   Basin, Togo: Probing Their Effectiveness and Co-Benefits
SO ECOLOGIES
LA English
DT Article
DE agroecosystems; agroforestry; climate change adaptation; ecosystem
   services; effectiveness; perception; Savannah
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; FOOD SECURITY; CONSERVATION; CHALLENGES; OPPORTUNITIES;
   AGRICULTURE; AGROECOLOGY; MANAGEMENT; SERVICES; ROTATION
AB The ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA) strategy is considered an effective approach to address the impact of climate change while ensuring the continued provision of ecosystem services on which farming depends. However, understanding the EbA's effectiveness for smallholder farmers in the Savannah region remains limited. The focus of this study is to explore the EbA practices that have been implemented by farming communities in the Savannah region of Togo. The study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of these practices and the perceived co-benefits reported by 425 smallholder farmers who participated in the survey. Our findings show that five practices, namely agroforestry, crop rotation, grass hedge/stone bunds, in-field water drainage channel, and intercropping, were practiced mainly by smallholder farmers and perceived as effective in reducing their vulnerability to climate risks. In addition, the benefits observed were linked to all five EbA practices. As a result, we can determine the suitable combination of EbA practices that fulfil the requirements of smallholder farmers, including co-benefits such as food security, adaptation advantages, and ecosystem service provisions. Such findings provide insights for developing integrated agriculture and climate change policies suitable for weather-induced disaster-prone areas such as the Savannah region.
C1 [Kissi, Abravi Essenam] Univ Lome, West African Sci Serv Ctr Climate Change & Adapte, 01BP1515, Lome, Togo.
   [Villamor, Grace B.] Scion New Zealand Forest Res Inst, Rotorua 3046, New Zealand.
   [Villamor, Grace B.] Univ Bonn, Res Dev Ctr, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
   [Abbey, Georges Abbevi] Univ Lome, Sch Agr, 01BP1515, Lome, Togo.
C3 University of Lome; University of Bonn; University of Lome
RP Villamor, GB (corresponding author), Scion New Zealand Forest Res Inst, Rotorua 3046, New Zealand.; Villamor, GB (corresponding author), Univ Bonn, Res Dev Ctr, D-53113 Bonn, Germany.
EM grace.villamor@scionresearch.com
RI Villamor, Grace/H-3717-2019
FU German Federal Ministry of Education and Research through the West
   African Science Service for Climate Change and Adapted Land Use (WASCAL)
FX This research was funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and
   Research through the West African Science Service for Climate Change and
   Adapted Land Use (WASCAL).
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NR 66
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 2
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2673-4133
J9 ECOLOGIES-BASEL
JI Ecol.
PD AUG
PY 2023
VL 4
IS 3
BP 535
EP 551
DI 10.3390/ecologies4030035
PG 17
WC Ecology
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA JX9M9
UT WOS:001176577100001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Okunola, OH
   Simatele, MD
   Olowoporoku, O
AF Okunola, Olasunkanmi Habeeb
   Simatele, Mulala Danny
   Olowoporoku, Oluwaseun
TI The influence of socioeconomic factors on individual and household
   adaptation strategies to climate change risks in Port Harcourt, Nigeria
SO JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate risk; adaptation pathways; coping response; vulnerability
   socioeconomic; household
ID FLOOD RISK; RESILIENCE; DISASTERS; SUPPORT
AB Increasing temperatures and sea levels, changing precipitation patterns and more extreme weather pose severe threats for vulnerable communities, ecosystems, and livelihoods in cities of developing countries. Realizing these threats has heightened scholarly inquiry on future risk trends of climate change and adaptation strategies in the countries of Global South and North. However, most studies are based on data of North America, Europe, and Asia. There is minimal documentation of adaptation strategies to mitigate the risk of extreme weather in cities of Sub-Saharan Africa. Hence, this study addresses this need by examining the factors influencing individual and household adaptation strategies to climate risk in Port Harcourt Metropolis, Nigeria. Data was collected from 384 randomly selected household heads in different residential densities of the city. Household socioeconomic and demographic attributes, awareness of climate change and factors influencing their adaptation strategies to climate risk were assessed using descriptive and inferential statistics. The study showed that adaptation strategies adopted were reactive rather than anticipatory and varied in magnitude according to the different residential densities. Recommendations emanating from the study include integrating and implementing climate change adaptation policies and embarking on a rigorous awareness campaign to ease households' vulnerability and augment their climate change absorptive, adaptive, and transformative abilities in the city.
C1 [Okunola, Olasunkanmi Habeeb; Simatele, Mulala Danny] Univ Witwatersrand, Global Change Inst GCI, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
   [Okunola, Olasunkanmi Habeeb; Simatele, Mulala Danny] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archeol & Environm Studies, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Johannesburg, South Africa.
   [Olowoporoku, Oluwaseun] Obafemi Awolowo Univ, Dept Urban & Reg Planning, Ife, Nigeria.
C3 University of Witwatersrand; University of Witwatersrand; Obafemi
   Awolowo University
RP Okunola, OH (corresponding author), Global Change Inst GCI, Private Bag 3, ZA-2050 Johannesburg, South Africa.
EM Olasunkanmi.okunola@wits.ac.za
RI Okunola, Olasunkanmi/AAG-2633-2021; Simatele, Mulala/AAS-9958-2020
OI Olowoporoku, Oluwaseun/0000-0001-8594-6142; OKUNOLA,
   Olasunkanmi/0000-0001-5855-8291
FU Munich Re Foundation
FX We would like to thank Munich Re Foundation through its "World Risk and
   Adaptation Futures: Social Protection" project including the financial
   support received in covering the APC charges for the publication of this
   paper.
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NR 59
TC 5
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 11
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1943-815X
EI 1943-8168
J9 J INTEGR ENVIRON SCI
JI J. Integr. Environ. Sci.
PD DEC 31
PY 2022
VL 19
IS 1
BP 273
EP 288
DI 10.1080/1943815X.2022.2143821
EA NOV 2022
PG 16
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 6W5KX
UT WOS:000882925400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Le Floch, N
   Pons, V
   Abdalla, EMH
   Alfredsen, K
AF Le Floch, Ninon
   Pons, Vincent
   Abdalla, Elhadi Mohsen Hassan
   Alfredsen, Knut
TI Catchment scale effects of low impact development implementation
   scenarios at different urbanization densities
SO JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Low Impact Development; LID implementation scenarios; Climate change
   adaptation; SWMM; Sensitivity analysis
ID ROOF TEST-BED; GREEN ROOF; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PERFORMANCE; SYSTEMS; MODELS;
   FUTURE
AB Climate change and urbanization put stress on urban stormwater systems, triggering hydraulic overloading and urban flooding increase. Low Impact Development (LID) techniques have a high potential to mitigate their impacts. This study investigates the consequences of climate change and urbanization on the urban runoff in the Risvollan catchment in Trondheim, Norway, and the effects of LID implementation and the influence of LID spatial distributions on their performance. A SWMM model of Risvollan was implemented, along with different scenarios of urbanization and climate change. The performance of various spatial distributions of LID infrastructures in the catchment was investigated, using the outflow volume and the peak runoff at the outfall as indicators. The rainfall event-based simulation results confirmed the negative effects of urbanization and climate change on urban runoff. These effects were partially mitigated by a homogenous LID implementation. The different spatial distributions of LID had little impact on volume reduction but targeting the most downstream zones of the model was more efficient in reducing the peaks at the catchment's outlet. These findings confirm that the spatial configuration of LID might be a determinant parameter towards an efficient design of LID infrastructure in urban settings, depending on the local stakes and criteria of urban water management.
C1 [Le Floch, Ninon; Pons, Vincent; Abdalla, Elhadi Mohsen Hassan; Alfredsen, Knut] Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Andersens Vei 5, N-7031 Trondelag, Norway.
   [Pons, Vincent] Univ Lyon, INSA Lyon, DEEP, EA7429, 11 Rue Phys, F-69621 Villeurbanne, France.
C3 Norwegian University of Science & Technology (NTNU); Institut National
   des Sciences Appliquees de Lyon - INSA Lyon
RP Pons, V (corresponding author), Norwegian Univ Sci & Technol, Dept Civil & Environm Engn, Andersens Vei 5, N-7031 Trondelag, Norway.; Pons, V (corresponding author), Univ Lyon, INSA Lyon, DEEP, EA7429, 11 Rue Phys, F-69621 Villeurbanne, France.
EM vincent.pons@ntnu.no
RI Abdalla, Elhadi Mohsen Hassan/AEQ-8621-2022
OI Mohsen Hassan Abdalla, Elhadi/0000-0002-9871-9034
FU Norges Forskningsr?d [237859/030]
FX Financial support: This research has been supported by the Norges
   Forskningsr?d (grant no. 237859/030) .
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NR 55
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 10
U2 72
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0022-1694
EI 1879-2707
J9 J HYDROL
JI J. Hydrol.
PD SEP
PY 2022
VL 612
AR 128178
DI 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2022.128178
EA JUL 2022
PN B
PG 17
WC Engineering, Civil; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Engineering; Geology; Water Resources
GA 5F3PL
UT WOS:000866230900005
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Zou, HX
   Li, SW
   Zou, HY
   Sun, W
   Niu, YN
   Yu, CQ
AF Zou, Huixia
   Li, Shaowei
   Zou, Huiyuan
   Sun, Wei
   Niu, Yingnan
   Yu, Chengqun
TI Livelihood Sustainability of Herder Households in North Tibet, China
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE sustainable livelihood; livelihood capital; rural development; pastoral
   area; northern Tibet
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SOCIAL-SECURITY; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES;
   VULNERABILITY; DIVERSIFICATION; POVERTY; PLATEAU; IMPACT; REGION; RIVER
AB The livelihood sustainability of rural residents has attracted a great deal of attention across the globe, especially in remote mountain areas. In this study, we interviewed 696 householders who were randomly selected from 'Changtang' (also called 'North Tibet'), Tibetan Autonomous Region, China. Under the sustainable livelihood index (SLI) framework, we evaluated the livelihood sustainability of herder households and examined the differences between low- and high-sustainability groups. Our findings revealed the following: (1) The livelihood sustainability of all herder households was generally low; low-sustainability households accounted for 87.07% of the samples. (2) Social, human, and physical capitals accounted for 81.6% of the variance in the SLI of herder households. Less physical capital was the main reason for a lower SLI. (3) Compared with high-SLI households, low-SLI families were characterized by having a higher dependency on natural resources, fewer fixed assets, weaker personal ability, and less participation in social organizations. Moreover, low-sustainability households were more vulnerable to medical expenses. Our study suggests that policymakers should pay closer attention to skills training, promote livelihood diversification, and strengthen social capital security. These actions are recommended for global poverty reduction and to promote the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals.
C1 [Zou, Huixia; Li, Shaowei; Sun, Wei; Yu, Chengqun] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Ecosyst Network Observat & Modelling, A11 Datun Rd, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
   [Zou, Huixia; Niu, Yingnan] Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing 100049, Peoples R China.
   [Zou, Huiyuan] Univ Int Business & Econ, Res Inst Global Value Chains, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China.
   [Niu, Yingnan] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Resource Use & Environm Remediat, A11 Datun Rd, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
C3 Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences & Natural
   Resources Research, CAS; Chinese Academy of Sciences; University of
   Chinese Academy of Sciences, CAS; University of International Business &
   Economics; Chinese Academy of Sciences; Institute of Geographic Sciences
   & Natural Resources Research, CAS
RP Yu, CQ (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Geog Sci & Nat Resources Res, Key Lab Ecosyst Network Observat & Modelling, A11 Datun Rd, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China.
EM zouhx.19b@igsnrr.ac.cn; leesw024@163.com; huiyuan_zou@163.com;
   wsun@igsnrr.ac.cn; niuyn.19b@igsnrr.ac.cn; yucq@igsnrr.ac.cn
FU Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research (STEP)
   [2019QZKK1002]; Science and Technology Department of the Tibetan
   Autonomous Region of China [XZ2019ZR G-154, XZ202101ZD0003N]; Science
   and Technology Service Network Scheme Project of the Chinese Academy of
   Sciences (STS) [KFJ-STS-QYZD-168, KFJ-STS-QYZD-2021-22-003]; National
   Key R&D Program of China [2021YFD1000303]
FX This research was funded by the Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific
   Expedition and Research (STEP, No. 2019QZKK1002), Science and Technology
   Department of the Tibetan Autonomous Region of China (No. XZ2019ZR
   G-154, XZ202101ZD0003N), Science and Technology Service Network Scheme
   Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (STS, No. KFJ-STS-QYZD-168,
   KFJ-STS-QYZD-2021-22-003), and the National Key R&D Program of China
   (No. 2021YFD1000303).
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NR 78
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 6
U2 59
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAY
PY 2022
VL 14
IS 9
AR 5166
DI 10.3390/su14095166
PG 14
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 1E9JZ
UT WOS:000794796600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Maslakov, A
   Sotnikova, K
   Gribovskii, G
   Evlanov, D
AF Maslakov, Alexey
   Sotnikova, Ksenia
   Gribovskii, Gleb
   Evlanov, Dmitry
TI Thermal Simulation of Ice Cellars as a Basis for Food Security and
   Energy Sustainability of Isolated Indigenous Communities in the Arctic
SO ENERGIES
LA English
DT Article
DE ice cellar; food security; energy sustainability; climate change
   adaptation; numerical simulation; permafrost; structural stability
ID STRATEGIES; MAP
AB Underground storage facilities dug in permafrost, or ice cellars, are a natural means of preserving food in conditions of transport isolation and total energy dependence on imported fuel. In the context of rapidly changing natural conditions, such storage facilities become unstable due to warming and degradation of permafrost. Monitoring and modeling the thermal regime of permafrost soils around ice cellars will help assess the impact of predicted climatic changes and the effectiveness of engineering solutions to sustain these facilities. In this paper, we made an attempt to simulate and predict the thermal regime of permafrost around an ice cellar, located in the community of Lorino, NE Russia. We found out that by 2050 the depth of seasonal thawing of the soil above the storage facility will increase from 1.12-1.74 m to 1.19-2.53 m, while the mean annual ground temperature will increase by only 0.5 degrees C, regardless of the climatic scenario. Results of the predictive simulation demonstrate significant but not critical changes of the thermal state of permafrost around the ice cellar. In fact, incorrect maintenance of the facility may have higher impact to its stability than climate changes. Some recommendations on preventive measures on increasing the ice cellar stability were provided.
C1 [Maslakov, Alexey; Sotnikova, Ksenia] Lomonosov Moscow State Univ, Fac Geog, Moscow 119991, Russia.
   [Gribovskii, Gleb; Evlanov, Dmitry] LLC STC Simmakers, Moscow 121205, Russia.
C3 Lomonosov Moscow State University
RP Maslakov, A (corresponding author), Lomonosov Moscow State Univ, Fac Geog, Moscow 119991, Russia.
EM alexey.maslakov@geogr.msu.ru; ks.sotnikova@geogr.msu.ru;
   gribovskii@simmakers.ru; dmitri.evlanov@simmakers.ru
RI Maslakov, Alexey/E-5746-2019
OI Maslakov, Alexey/0000-0003-2674-2646
FU State Assignment of the Laboratory of Geoecology of the Northern
   Territories, MSU Faculty of Geography, U.S. National Science Foundation
   [OPP1304555, 1836377]; Directorate For Geosciences; Office of Polar
   Programs (OPP) [1836377] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
FX This research was funded by State Assignment of the Laboratory of
   Geoecology of the Northern Territories, MSU Faculty of Geography, U.S.
   National Science Foundation awards OPP1304555 and 1836377.
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NR 51
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 5
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1996-1073
J9 ENERGIES
JI Energies
PD FEB
PY 2022
VL 15
IS 3
AR 972
DI 10.3390/en15030972
PG 16
WC Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Energy & Fuels
GA 1U0ZI
UT WOS:000805148700018
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Dorst, H
   van der Jagt, A
   Runhaar, H
   Raven, R
AF Dorst, Hade
   van der Jagt, Alexander
   Runhaar, Hens
   Raven, Rob
TI Structural conditions for the wider uptake of urban nature-based
   solutions-A conceptual framework
SO CITIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainable cities; Urban development; Urban planning; Sustainability
   transitions; Socio-technical regimes
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SUSTAINABILITY TRANSITIONS; INFRASTRUCTURE;
   REGIMES; SYSTEMS; RECONFIGURATION; PERSPECTIVE; RESILIENCE; GOVERNANCE;
   BENEFITS
AB In policy and practice, urban Nature-Based Solutions (NBS) are considered promising innovations for sustainable urban transformation. NBS are interventions that use nature to address multiple sustainability challenges simultaneously. As such, they present a novel perspective on urban land use and development. Yet their current uptake into urban development lags behind EU ambitions. Drawing from transitions studies, this paper suggests that the limited uptake of NBS innovation stems from structural conditions that keep urban development systems locked in their current state, thereby favouring traditional 'grey' development. With a systematic literature review, we identify preliminary structural conditions that likely affect the uptake of urban NBS, culminating in a framework of 'urban infrastructure regimes', which we then illustrate with two European examples of urban NBS. Our findings indicate the relevance of using a transitions studies perspective for generating insights into the structural conditions - knowledge base, policy paradigms, etc. - that underlie barriers and opportunities for NBS uptake. We particularly argue that identifying the state and obduracy of these conditions provides a deeper understanding of how NBS uptake takes place. Findings also suggest that nature-based innovations require a customised transitions framework that accounts for the role of physical geographies.
C1 [Dorst, Hade; van der Jagt, Alexander; Runhaar, Hens; Raven, Rob] Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Princetonlaan 8a, NL-3584 CB Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [Runhaar, Hens] Wageningen Univ & Res, Forest & Nat Conservat Policy Grp, Droevendaalsesteeg 3, NL-6708 PB Wageningen, Netherlands.
   [Raven, Rob] Monash Univ, Monash Sustainable Dev Inst, 8 Scen Blvd, Clayton, Vic 3800, Australia.
C3 Utrecht University; Wageningen University & Research; Monash University
RP Dorst, H (corresponding author), Univ Utrecht, Copernicus Inst Sustainable Dev, Princetonlaan 8a, NL-3584 CB Utrecht, Netherlands.
EM h.m.dorst@uu.nl; a.p.n.vanderjagt@uu.nl; h.a.c.runhaar@uu.nl;
   rob.raven@monash.edu
RI Runhaar, Hens/L-5395-2013; van der Jagt, Alexander/AAW-5556-2021; Raven,
   Rob/GXG-2362-2022; Raven, Rob/C-3048-2017
OI Dorst, Hade/0009-0001-1508-4441; van der Jagt,
   Alexander/0000-0002-1365-5765; Raven, Rob/0000-0002-6330-0831
FU European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme
   [730243]; NATURVATION research project; H2020 Societal Challenges
   Programme [730243] Funding Source: H2020 Societal Challenges Programme
FX This research was funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research
   and innovation programme under grant agreement No. 730243 and
   participating partners in the NATURVATION research project. We are
   furthermore grateful for the contributions of Harriet Bulkeley, Helen
   Toxopeus, Friedemann Polzin, Sandra Naumann and Matthew Bach to the
   initial phases of the framework conceptualisation.
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NR 73
TC 29
Z9 30
U1 4
U2 35
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0264-2751
EI 1873-6084
J9 CITIES
JI Cities
PD SEP
PY 2021
VL 116
AR 103283
DI 10.1016/j.cities.2021.103283
EA JUN 2021
PG 10
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA TE8SZ
UT WOS:000670278500012
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Graveline, N
   Grémont, M
AF Graveline, Nina
   Gremont, Marine
TI The role of perceptions, goals and characteristics of wine growers on
   irrigation adoption in the context of climate change
SO AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Climate change; Irrigation; Wine; Global change; Perceptions
ID AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION; PRECIPITATION TRENDS; FARMERS ADAPTATION;
   WATER; TECHNOLOGIES; TEMPERATURE; VARIABILITY; UNCERTAINTY; ECONOMICS;
   FUTURE
AB Among the multiple adaptations that exist to face climate change, irrigation is one straightforward option for wine growing. Yet, widespread development of irrigation may strengthen water scarcity and further increase farmers? vulnerability to water stress. In this context, understanding the conditions of the adoption of irrigation is of outmost importance to characterize the process, the risks and the policy implications of climate change adaptation. This paper presents an empirical approach for understanding the factors driving current and envisioned irrigation at farm level, by combining Internet-survey data and terroir data (precipitation, temperature, and soil water holding capacity) characterizing wine growers and farms in southeastern France (LanguedocRoussillon). Survey data include current and future practices, the perceptions of past changes, and wine growers? main objectives. The sample gathers 28% of growers that are already irrigating their vines, 39% that are considering this option for the future. Results of different econometric models show that both terroir and socioeconomic factors such as perceptions and objectives play significant roles in the adoption of irrigation. Specifically, perceptions of water scarcity seem to drive future irrigation projects much more than real water scarcity. These results carry important policy implications for water-demand forecasting and water-supply planning.
C1 [Graveline, Nina] Univ Montpellier, Inst Agro, INRAE, CIRAD,INNOVATION, Montpellier, France.
   [Gremont, Marine] Univ Montpellier, Bur Rech Geol & Minieres BRGM, F-34000 Montpellier, France.
C3 Institut Agro; CIRAD; INRAE; Universite de Montpellier; Universite de
   Montpellier; Bureau de Recherches Geologiques et Minieres (BRGM)
RP Graveline, N (corresponding author), INRAE, INNOVATION, 2 Pl Pierre Viala, F-34000 Montpellier, France.
EM nina.graveline@inrae.fr
RI Graveline, Nina/AAG-5114-2020
OI Graveline, Nina/0000-0002-7976-0007
FU BRGM (project SIMADAPT)
FX This work has been financed by BRGM (project SIMADAPT) and conducted
   while the authors worked for BRGM. The authors wish to especially thank
   Laurent Gourdon of the Chambre d'Agriculture de l'Herault as well as
   Emmanuel Rouchaud, Jacques Oustric and Alain Halma of the Chambre
   d'Agriculture de l'Aude, du Gard et des Pyreenees-Orientales. We also
   thank the Centres d'Initiatives pour Valoriser l'Agriculture and the
   Milieu rural de l'Aude, du Gard, de l'Herault et des Pyrenees
   Orientales, the Vignerons independants de l'Aude et des Pyrenees
   Orientales, and the Cooperatives de France de l'Aude, de l'Herault et
   des Pyrenees Orientales. Camille Tedesco and Jean-Francois Desprats also
   helped with face-to-face interviews and providing temperature and
   precipitation data respectively. We thank Tatiana Paricaud and Etienne
   Besancenot for testing the questionnaire and helping in its diffusion.
   We thank Jean-Marc Touzard for discussions on this work. We acknowledge
   support from Guy Bray for translation and revision of the English
   language.
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NR 38
TC 12
Z9 12
U1 3
U2 22
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-3774
EI 1873-2283
J9 AGR WATER MANAGE
JI Agric. Water Manage.
PD MAY 1
PY 2021
VL 250
AR 106837
DI 10.1016/j.agwat.2021.106837
EA MAR 2021
PG 12
WC Agronomy; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Agriculture; Water Resources
GA RH5OO
UT WOS:000636268000007
OA Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Johnston, C
   Spring, A
AF Johnston, Carla
   Spring, Andrew
TI Grassroots and Global Governance: Can Global-Local Linkages Foster Food
   System Resilience for Small Northern Canadian Communities?
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE global governance; food systems; climate change; adaptation; knowledge
   sharing; community-needs approach; Indigenous; northern Canada
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; INDIGENOUS PEOPLES; SECURITY; VULNERABILITY;
   SOVEREIGNTY; SUSTAINABILITY; ADAPTATION; KNOWLEDGE; RESPONSES; POLITICS
AB Communities in Canada's Northwest Territories (NWT) are at the forefront of the global climate emergency. Yet, they are not passive victims; local-level programs are being implemented across the region to maintain livelihoods and promote adaptation. At the same time, there is a recent call within global governance literature to pay attention to how global policy is implemented and affecting people on the ground. Thinking about these two processes, we ask the question: (how) can global governance assist northern Indigenous communities in Canada in reaching their goals of adapting their food systems to climate change? To answer this question, we argue for a "community needs" approach when engaging in global governance literature and practice, which puts community priorities and decision-making first. As part of a collaborative research partnership, we highlight the experiences of Ka'a'gee Tu First Nation, located in Kakisa, NWT, Canada. We include their successes of engaging in global network building and the systemic roadblock of lack of formal land tenure. Moreover, we analyze potential opportunities for this community to engage with global governance instruments and continue connecting to global networks that further their goals related to climate change adaptation and food sovereignty.
C1 [Johnston, Carla] Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Balsillie Sch Int Affairs, Waterloo, ON N2L 6C2, Canada.
   [Spring, Andrew] Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Laurier Ctr Sustainable Food Syst, Waterloo, ON N2L 6C2, Canada.
C3 Wilfrid Laurier University; University of Waterloo; Wilfrid Laurier
   University
RP Spring, A (corresponding author), Wilfrid Laurier Univ, Laurier Ctr Sustainable Food Syst, Waterloo, ON N2L 6C2, Canada.
EM cjohnston@balsillieschool.ca; aspring@wlu.ca
RI Johnston, Carla/JDD-8128-2023
OI Spring, Andrew/0000-0001-8524-8926; Johnston, Carla/0000-0003-0509-4889
FU Social Science and Humanities Research Council [895-2015-1016];
   Government of Canada's Climate Change Health Adaptation Program and
   Climate Change Preparedness in the North Program
FX This research was funded by Social Science and Humanities Research
   Council (#895-2015-1016) and through the Government of Canada's Climate
   Change Health Adaptation Program and Climate Change Preparedness in the
   North Program.
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NR 110
TC 6
Z9 7
U1 1
U2 15
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD FEB
PY 2021
VL 13
IS 4
AR 2415
DI 10.3390/su13042415
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA QQ8QY
UT WOS:000624785300001
OA gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tanteliniaina, MFR
   Chen, J
   Adyel, TM
   Zhai, J
AF Tanteliniaina, Mirindra Finaritra Rabezanahary
   Chen, Jia
   Adyel, Tanveer M.
   Zhai, Jun
TI Elevation Dependence of the Impact of Global Warming on Rainfall
   Variations in a Tropical Island
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE global warming; temperature; rainfall; elevation; tropical climate;
   Madagascar
ID YELLOW-RIVER BASIN; CLIMATE-CHANGE; WAVELET TRANSFORM; TEMPERATURE
   VARIABILITY; WATER-RESOURCES; PRECIPITATION; AFRICA; TRENDS;
   VULNERABILITY; REGIONS
AB Due to their vulnerability, understanding the impacts of global warming on rainfall is important for a tropical country and islands. This research aimed to assess the impact of global warming on rainfall in Madagascar, using the Mann-Kendall test, continuous wavelet transform, and polynomial regression. The result showed that the annual, seasonal maximum, and minimum temperature increased, while elevation amplified the increase of maximum temperature. Different trends in rainfall were found in the 22 regions of Madagascar but in general, the increasing trend in rainfall was prominent at a higher elevation than lower elevation. The annual rainfall decreased up to -5 mm per year for the regions located below 450 m of altitude while increased up to +5 mm per year above 500 m. We found that the wet becomes wetter with an important increase in rainfall in summer and the increase in temperature influenced the rainfall. The annual rainfall increased with temperature and elevation. However, if the increase in temperature was more than 0.03 degrees C per year, the annual rainfall increased regardless of elevation. The knowledge of the elevation dependence of the impact of warming on rainfall is important for water resources management and climate change adaptation strategies, especially for island nations and African countries.
C1 [Tanteliniaina, Mirindra Finaritra Rabezanahary; Zhai, Jun] Chongqing Univ, MOE Key Lab Three Gorges Reservoir Reg Ecoenviron, Chongqing 400045, Peoples R China.
   [Chen, Jia] Chongqing Technol & Business Univ, MOE Engn Res Ctr Waste Oil Recovery Technol & Equ, Chongqing 400067, Peoples R China.
   [Adyel, Tanveer M.] Monash Univ, Dept Civil Engn, 23 Coll Walk, Clayton, Vic 3800, Australia.
C3 Chongqing University; Chongqing Technology & Business University; Monash
   University
RP Zhai, J (corresponding author), Chongqing Univ, MOE Key Lab Three Gorges Reservoir Reg Ecoenviron, Chongqing 400045, Peoples R China.
EM mirindra@cqu.edu.cn; jiachen77@ctbu.edu.cn; tanveer.adyel@monash.edu;
   zhaijun@cqu.edu.cn
RI Adyel, Tanveer/AAQ-6463-2020; RABEZANAHARY TANTELINIAINA,
   MIRINDRA/HNC-5712-2023
OI Zhai, Jun/0000-0002-4378-0604; Adyel, Tanveer/0000-0001-5940-5406;
   Rabezanahary Tanteliniaina, Mirindra Finaritra/0000-0002-0753-8757
FU National Natural Science Foundation of China [51878093]; National Key
   R&D Program of China [2018YFB2101001-03]; Chongqing Technology
   Innovation and Application Demonstration Special Project-Key Research
   [cstc2018jscx-mszdX0087, cstc2018jszx-336 zdyfxmX0009]
FX This work was funded by the National Natural Science Foundation of China
   (No. 51878093), National Key R&D Program of China (2018YFB2101001-03),
   and Chongqing Technology Innovation and Application Demonstration
   Special Project-Key Research And Development Projects Related to
   People's Livelihood (cstc2018jscx-mszdX0087, cstc2018jszx-336
   zdyfxmX0009).
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NR 67
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 11
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD DEC
PY 2020
VL 12
IS 12
AR 3582
DI 10.3390/w12123582
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA PL1YJ
UT WOS:000602925800001
OA Green Accepted, gold, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Giacomini, G
AF Giacomini, Giada
TI Free prior and informed consent in the Green Climate Fund: the
   implementation of a project in the Datem del Maranon, Peru
SO CUHSO-CULTURA-HOMBRE-SOCIEDAD
LA English
DT Article
DE Free prior and informed consent; Indigenous peoples; Green Climate Fund;
   climate policies
ID HUMAN-RIGHTS
AB In the context of implementation of climate change adaptation and resilience projects, Indigenous communities' right to Free, Prior and Informed Consent (FPIC) is becoming a mandatory requirement. The present paper, after giving an overview of the requirement of FPIC in international law, addresses the issue of a climate resilience project financed by the Green Climate Fund (GCF) in Peru. Such project is being implemented in Indigenous territories in the Datem del Maranon region. At the time of approval by the GCF Board, the proposed project raised protests from Indigenous communities as they claimed they were not properly consulted before the disbursement of funding. This episode evidenced how the GCF needed to adopt an ad hoc policy to engage with Indigenous peoples respecting the FPIC requirement as prescribed by international law. The present paper demonstrates that the Indigenous Peoples Policy, adopted in February 2018 by the GCF, is an example of harmonization with international law requirements for FPIC such as those prescribed by the United Nations Declaration on Indigenous Peoples Rights. Finally, the paper aims at evidencing the challenge represented by the excessive state-centred structure of the GCF, which needs to be overcome to facilitate a true participatory dialogue with Indigenous peoples.
C1 [Giacomini, Giada] Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Polit Sci, Rome, Italy.
C3 Sapienza University Rome
RP Giacomini, G (corresponding author), Univ Roma La Sapienza, Dept Polit Sci, Rome, Italy.
EM giada.giacomini@uniroma1.it
OI GIACOMINI, GIADA/0000-0002-3618-4011
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NR 41
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 5
U2 12
PU UNIV CATOLICA TEMUCO
PI TEMUCO
PA MANUEL MONTT 056, TEMUCO, 00000, CHILE
SN 0716-1557
EI 0719-2789
J9 CUHSO-CULT-HOMBRE-SO
JI CUHSO-Cult.-Hombre-Soc.
PD JUL
PY 2020
VL 30
IS 1
BP 102
EP 125
DI 10.7770/2452-610X.2020.CUHSO.01.A07
PG 24
WC Social Issues
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Social Issues
GA MQ9WM
UT WOS:000553245200007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Schreier, AD
   Stevens, P
AF Schreier, Andrea D.
   Stevens, Peter
TI Further evidence for lower Columbia River green sturgeon spawning
SO ENVIRONMENTAL BIOLOGY OF FISHES
LA English
DT Article
DE Green sturgeon; Acipenser medirostris; Northern DPS; Columbia River;
   Spawning; Flow
ID ACIPENSER-TRANSMONTANUS RICHARDSON; POPULATION-STRUCTURE; MEDIROSTRIS;
   MIGRATION; CALIFORNIA; INFERENCE; PATTERNS; PROGRAM
AB The Green Sturgeon is a long-lived anadromous fish known to spawn in only three locations. Southern Distinct Population Segment (DPS) Green Sturgeon spawn only in the Sacramento drainage, while the Northern DPS spawns in the Klamath and Rogue rivers. In 2011, a young of year (YOY) Green Sturgeon was captured in the Columbia River below Bonneville Dam, providing preliminary evidence of a fourth spawning location. In 2017, four additional Green Sturgeon YOY of similar size were captured in the Columbia River below Bonneville Dam. Genetic analysis of all YOY samples indicates that they belong to the Northern DPS, confirming that the Northern DPS actually spawns in at least three locations. The detection of Green Sturgeon spawning in the Columbia River only in years with relatively high spring flow (2011, 2017), combined with confirmed correlations between flow and spawning for other White and Green Sturgeon populations, suggests that appropriate spawning conditions may only exist above a specific flow threshold. The Columbia River has the potential to play an important role in Green Sturgeon climate change adaptation due to its location at the northernmost end of the species' reproductive range. We recommend future research to better quantify Green Sturgeon recruitment magnitude, frequency and dynamics in the Columbia River.
C1 [Schreier, Andrea D.] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Anim Sci, Genom Variat Lab, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
   [Stevens, Peter] Oregon Dept Fish & Wildlife, 17330 SE Evelyn St, Clackamas, OR 97015 USA.
C3 University of California System; University of California Davis
RP Schreier, AD (corresponding author), Univ Calif Davis, Dept Anim Sci, Genom Variat Lab, Davis, CA 95616 USA.
EM amdrauch@ucdavis.edu
RI Schreier, Andrea/J-7023-2013
OI Schreier, Andrea/0000-0002-2241-3119; Stevens, Peter/0000-0002-3493-0754
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NR 34
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 19
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0378-1909
EI 1573-5133
J9 ENVIRON BIOL FISH
JI Environ. Biol. Fishes
PD FEB
PY 2020
VL 103
IS 2
BP 201
EP 208
DI 10.1007/s10641-019-00945-9
PG 8
WC Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA KT0WJ
UT WOS:000518731300006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wolff, NH
   Masuda, YJ
   Meijaard, E
   Wells, JA
   Game, ET
AF Wolff, Nicholas H.
   Masuda, Yuta J.
   Meijaard, Erik
   Wells, Jessie A.
   Game, Edward T.
TI Impacts of tropical deforestation on local temperature and human
   wellbeing perceptions
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Ecosystem services; Cooling services; Human health; Heat illness; Land
   use change; Climate change adaptation
ID BASE-LINE SYNDROME; CLIMATE-CHANGE; HEAT-STRESS; LAND-COVER; THERMAL
   COMFORT; FORESTS; HEALTH; CONSERVATION; PRODUCTIVITY; ADAPTATION
AB The combined effects of changes in climate and land cover expose millions of people to an increased likelihood of heat illness. Impacts of heat stress on health have primarily been quantified for urban environments, particularly in developed countries. Far less is known in other settings, including the effects of ongoing tropical deforestation on local temperature and its consequences for people living in these rapidly changing landscapes. Here, we explore links between deforestation and self-reported human health and well-being in the tropical landscapes of Borneo. We use extensive social surveys from nearly 500 villages throughout Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo) that asked whether forests were important for health, and why. The most frequent answer viewed forests as important for maintaining cool local temperatures (volunteered by 28% of 4634 respondents). Using boosted regression tree analysis incorporating spatial metrics of deforestation and temperature, we found that villagers were more likely to report this cooling effect if they were from villages with higher or more variable temperatures, and in recently deforested or fragmented landscapes. Our results highlight the role of forests in regulating the local climate. This ecosystem service is highly threatened, and yet increasingly vital for avoiding heat illness and enabling adaptation to global climate change.
C1 [Wolff, Nicholas H.] Nature Conservancy, Global Sci, Brunswick, ME 04011 USA.
   [Masuda, Yuta J.] Nature Conservancy, Global Sci, Seattle, WA USA.
   [Meijaard, Erik; Wells, Jessie A.] Univ Queensland, ARC Ctr Excellence Environm Decis, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Meijaard, Erik; Wells, Jessie A.] Borneo Futures, Country Woods 306,JL WRSupratman, Jakarta 15412, Indonesia.
   [Game, Edward T.] Univ Queensland, Ctr Biodivers & Conservat Sci, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Game, Edward T.] Nature Conservancy, Global Sci, South Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
C3 Nature Conservancy; Nature Conservancy; University of Queensland;
   University of Queensland; Nature Conservancy
RP Wolff, NH (corresponding author), Nature Conservancy, Global Sci, Brunswick, ME 04011 USA.
EM Nicholas.wolff@tnc.org
RI Meijaard, Erik/A-2687-2016; Game, Edward/AAD-2289-2020; Wells,
   Jessie/F-7318-2010
OI Wells, Jessie/0000-0002-3555-5108; Wolff, Nicholas/0000-0003-1162-3556;
   Game, Edward/0000-0003-4707-9281
FU Directorate of Forest Protection and Nature Conservation of the
   Indonesian Ministry of Environment and Forestry; Adopt-an-Acre program
FX We thank the Directorate of Forest Protection and Nature Conservation of
   the Indonesian Ministry of Environment and Forestry for supporting our
   study, and the Association of Indonesian Primatologists (FORINA) for
   coordinating the interview studies. We are most grateful to our many
   respondents throughout Kalimantan for sharing their perceptions of their
   environment and well-being, and thank the Adopt-an-Acre program for
   funding the interview surveys. We thank Roy Vagelos for his support of
   NHW.
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TC 54
Z9 56
U1 2
U2 54
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI London
PA 125 London Wall, London, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD SEP
PY 2018
VL 52
BP 181
EP 189
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2018.07.004
PG 9
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA GZ5FP
UT WOS:000449444900017
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mwavu, EN
   Kalema, VK
   Bateganya, F
   Byakagaba, P
   Waiswa, D
   Enuru, T
   Mbogga, MS
AF Mwavu, Edward N.
   Kalema, Vettes K.
   Bateganya, Fred
   Byakagaba, Patrick
   Waiswa, Daniel
   Enuru, Thomas
   Mbogga, Michael S.
TI Expansion of Commercial Sugarcane Cultivation among Smallholder Farmers
   in Uganda: Implications for Household Food Security
SO LAND
LA English
DT Article
DE poverty alleviation; sustainable livelihoods; climate change; commercial
   agriculture
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; AGROBIODIVERSITY; SUSTAINABILITY;
   BIODIVERSITY; AGRICULTURE; SUBSISTENCE; FORESTS; PALM
AB Understanding the impact of commercial agriculture in the face of global change is critical to support strategies that ensure food security and alleviate poverty among households. We assessed the contribution of commercial sugarcane cultivation to household-level food security among smallholder farmers in Busoga sub-region, eastern Uganda. Land use changes are motivated by quick commercial gains rather than sustained food production; a situation that influences food security. The majority of households cultivate few crop varieties, lack adequate and nutritious foods, and have inadequate income to purchase food to meet their needs. Inadequacy of food within some commercial sugarcane-cultivating households suggests that generating income does not necessarily increase food security. To cope with food insecurity, households offer labour in exchange for food, borrow food, ration food, and at times steal. This is exacerbated by increasing food crop failures, large family sizes, trade in food items, and declining availability of food and land for food production. Commercial sugarcane cultivation is the main driver of food insecurity but given its perceived economic benefits, future sugarcane plantations expansion in the region is probably inevitable. Therefore, future policy should be designed to provide triple-win strategies (i.e., food security, poverty alleviation, and climate change adaptation) that provide sustainable livelihoods.
C1 [Mwavu, Edward N.; Byakagaba, Patrick; Waiswa, Daniel; Enuru, Thomas; Mbogga, Michael S.] Makerere Univ, Sch Forestry Environm & Geog Sci, POB 7062, Kampala, Uganda.
   [Kalema, Vettes K.] Kachwekano Zonal Agr Res & Dev Inst, POB 421, Kabale, Uganda.
   [Bateganya, Fred] Makerere Univ, Coll Humanities & Social Sci, POB 7062, Kampala, Uganda.
C3 Makerere University; Makerere University
RP Mwavu, EN (corresponding author), Makerere Univ, Sch Forestry Environm & Geog Sci, POB 7062, Kampala, Uganda.
EM emwavu@caes.mak.ac.ug; vetteskalema@gmail.com; frebat2011@gmail.com;
   Byakagaba@caes.mak.ac.ug; daniel.waiswa@gmail.com;
   tenuru@caes.mak.ac.ug; mbogga@caes.mak.ac.ug
OI Byakagaba, Patrick/0000-0003-1685-1347
FU Carnegie Corporation of New York; Makerere University, through the Next
   Generation of African Academics Project
FX This study was funded in part by the Carnegie Corporation of New York
   and Makerere University, through the Next Generation of African
   Academics Project.
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U1 1
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PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
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PY 2018
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OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Brown, P
   Daigneault, AJ
   Tjernström, E
   Zou, WB
AF Brown, Philip
   Daigneault, Adam J.
   Tjernstrom, Emilia
   Zou, Wenbo
TI Natural disasters, social protection, and risk perceptions
SO WORLD DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Subjective expectations; Climate; Natural disasters; Social protection;
   Oceania; Fiji
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; FLOOD RISK; BEHAVIOR; EXPERIENCE; RAINFALL;
   DETERMINANTS; PREPAREDNESS; PREFERENCES; VARIABILITY; RESILIENCE
AB Natural disasters give rise to loss and damage and may affect subjective expectations about the prevalence and severity of future disasters. These expectations might then in turn shape individuals' investment behaviors, potentially affecting their incomes in subsequent years. As part of an emerging literature on endogenous preferences, economists have begun studying the consequences that exposure to natural disasters have on risk attitudes, perceptions, and behavior. We add to this field by studying the impact of being struck by the December 2012 Cyclone Evan on Fijian households' risk attitudes and subjective expectations about the likelihood and severity of natural disasters over the next 20 years. The randomness of the cyclone's path allows us to estimate the causal effects of exposure on both risk attitudes and risk perceptions. Our results show that being struck by an extreme event substantially changes individuals' risk perceptions as well as their beliefs about the frequency and magnitude of future shocks. However, we find sharply distinct results for the two ethnicities in our sample, indigenous Fijians and Indo-Fijians; the impact of the natural disaster aligns with previous results in the literature on risk attitudes and risk perceptions for Indo-Fijians, whereas they have little to no impact on those same measures for indigenous Fijians. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Brown, Philip] Landcare Res, Lincoln, New Zealand.
   [Daigneault, Adam J.] Univ Maine, Sch Forest Resources, Orono, ME 04469 USA.
   [Tjernstrom, Emilia] Univ Wisconsin, Robert M La Follette Sch Publ Affairs, Madison, WI USA.
   [Tjernstrom, Emilia] Univ Wisconsin, Dept Agr & Appl Econ, Madison, WI USA.
   [Zou, Wenbo] Nankai Univ, Inst State Econ, Wenchuang Bldg,Room A205,Weijin Rd 94, Tianjin, Peoples R China.
   [Zou, Wenbo] Nankai Univ, Collaborat Innovat Ctr China Econ, Tianjin, Peoples R China.
C3 Landcare Research - New Zealand; University of Maine System; University
   of Maine Orono; University of Wisconsin System; University of Wisconsin
   Madison; University of Wisconsin System; University of Wisconsin
   Madison; Nankai University; Nankai University
RP Zou, WB (corresponding author), Nankai Univ, Inst State Econ, Wenchuang Bldg,Room A205,Weijin Rd 94, Tianjin, Peoples R China.
EM joyque.zou@gmail.com
RI Tjernstrom, Emilia/R-5615-2019; Daigneault, Adam/GYU-9342-2022
OI Daigneault, Adam/0000-0002-8287-8727; Tjernstrom,
   Emilia/0000-0003-2202-6001
FU Climate and Development Knowledge Network (CDKN) [RSGL-0024F]
FX We gratefully acknowledge the Climate and Development Knowledge Network
   (CDKN) for funding this project under Grant No. RSGL-0024F in
   conjunction with Landcare Research and the Institute of Applied Science
   at the University of the South Pacific. We thank Bill Aalbersberg, James
   Comley, David Gawith, Suzie Greenhalgh, Isao Korovulavula, Fraser
   Morgan, and Will Wright for their contributions to this project. We
   would also like to acknowledge Alison Harrell for providing outstanding
   research assistance. We have benefitted from insightful comments from
   Dan Phaneuf as well as thoughtful audience comments at the University of
   Otago, the University of California Davis, the University of North
   Dakota, the Centre for Demography and Ecology at the University of
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NR 103
TC 96
Z9 113
U1 9
U2 109
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0305-750X
EI 1873-5991
J9 WORLD DEV
JI World Dev.
PD APR
PY 2018
VL 104
BP 310
EP 325
DI 10.1016/j.worlddev.2017.12.002
PG 16
WC Development Studies; Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Business & Economics
GA FV8QW
UT WOS:000424852900022
PM 30100664
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Araos, M
   Ford, J
   Berrang-Ford, L
   Biesbroek, R
   Moser, S
AF Araos, Malcolm
   Ford, James
   Berrang-Ford, Lea
   Biesbroek, Robbert
   Moser, Sarah
TI Climate change adaptation planning for Global South megacities: the case
   of Dhaka
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; adaptation; adaptation readiness; cities; Global South;
   environmental planning
ID PUBLIC-HEALTH ADAPTATION; OVERCOMING BARRIERS; BANGLADESH;
   VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; CITIES
AB Megacities in low- and middle-income countries face unique threats from climate change as vulnerable populations and infrastructure are concentrated in high-risk areas. This paper develops a theoretical framework to characterize adaptation readiness in Global South cities and applies the framework to Dhaka, Bangladesh, a city with acute exposure and projected impacts from flooding and extreme heat. To gather case evidence from Dhaka we draw upon interviews with national and municipal government officials and a review of planning documents and peer-reviewed literature. We find: (1) national-level plans propose a number of adaptation strategies, but urban concerns compete with priorities such as protection of coastal assets and agricultural production; (2) municipal plans focus on identifying vulnerability and impacts rather than adaptation strategies; (3) interviewees suggest that lack of coordination among local government (LG) organizations and lack of transparency act as barriers for municipal adaptation planning, with national plans driving policy where LGs have limited human and financial resources; and (4) we found limited evidence that national urban adaptation directives trickle down to municipal government. The framework developed offers a systematic and standardized means to assess and monitor the status of adaptation planning in Global South cities, and identify adaptation constraints and opportunities.
C1 [Araos, Malcolm; Berrang-Ford, Lea; Moser, Sarah] McGill Univ, Dept Geog, 805 Sherbrooke St West, Montreal, PQ H3A 0B9, Canada.
   [Ford, James] McGill Univ, Dept Geog, Climate Change Adaptat Res Grp, Montreal, PQ, Canada.
   [Biesbroek, Robbert] Wageningen Univ, Publ Adm & Policy, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 McGill University; McGill University; Wageningen University & Research
RP Araos, M (corresponding author), McGill Univ, Dept Geog, 805 Sherbrooke St West, Montreal, PQ H3A 0B9, Canada.
EM malcolm.araosegan@mail.mcgill.ca
RI Biesbroek, Robbert/GZZ-4476-2022; Ford, James/A-4284-2013; Biesbroek,
   Robbert/I-2384-2013; Berrang-Ford, Lea/H-5965-2013
OI Ford, James/0000-0002-2066-3456; Biesbroek, Robbert/0000-0002-2906-1419;
   Berrang-Ford, Lea/0000-0001-9216-8035
FU CIHR Applied Public Health Chairs Program; SSHRC Insight Grant; Trottier
   Public Science Policy Fellowship (Faculty of Science, McGill
   University); Fonds de la Recherche en Sante du Quebec (FRSQ) Bourse de
   Carrier
FX The authors would like to acknowledge funding provided by the CIHR
   Applied Public Health Chairs Program, a SSHRC Insight Grant and
   Partnership Development Grant, the Trottier Public Science Policy
   Fellowship (Faculty of Science, McGill University), and the Fonds de la
   Recherche en Sante du Quebec (FRSQ) Bourse de Carrier.
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U1 8
U2 49
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PY 2017
VL 19
IS 6
BP 682
EP 696
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2016.1264873
PG 15
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA FP5DO
UT WOS:000417640100009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Gampell, AV
   Gaillard, JC
   Parsons, M
   Fisher, K
AF Gampell, Anthony Viennaminovich
   Gaillard, J. C.
   Parsons, Meg
   Fisher, Karen
TI Beyond Stop Disasters 2.0: an agenda for exploring the contribution of
   video games to learning about disasters
SO ENVIRONMENTAL HAZARDS-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Disaster risk education; video games; education; participation; learning
   theory; constructivism
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; RISK REDUCTION
AB With the increasing popularity of video games over the last few decades, a significant research area for disaster studies has presented itself. Preliminary disaster video game research deconstructed a multitude of disaster video games from various international organisations (e.g. UNESCO, UNISDR), governments (e.g. Canada), non-government organisations (e.g. Save the Children, Christian Aid), researchers and mainstream disaster video games. This research demonstrated that video games have an ability to convey messages regarding disaster and disaster risk reduction (DRR), including portrayals of hazards, vulnerabilities, capacities and numerous disaster discourses. Yet, there is a paucity of studies on these games in the disaster research literature. This review situates the foundations of disaster video game research within the realm of disaster studies, exploring concepts of disaster risk including hazards, vulnerability, capacities and methods of DRR. The review also works to link video games to disaster studies through the sphere of disaster risk education, participation and the learning theory of constructivism. This review sets the framework to enable adequate exploration of disaster video games in a way that could potentially contribute to DRR learning strategies of the future, with video games becoming a new cadre to the existing DRR tool kit.
C1 [Gampell, Anthony Viennaminovich; Gaillard, J. C.; Parsons, Meg; Fisher, Karen] Univ Auckland, Sch Environm, Auckland, New Zealand.
C3 University of Auckland
RP Gampell, AV (corresponding author), Univ Auckland, Sch Environm, Auckland, New Zealand.
EM a.gampell@auckland.ac.nz
RI Fisher, Karen/HJH-3615-2023; Gampell, Anthony/JDC-7826-2023; Parsons,
   Meg/C-2405-2019
OI Parsons, Meg/0000-0001-8721-659X
FU Earthquake Commission, New Zealand [3709987]
FX This work was supported by the Earthquake Commission, New Zealand [grant
   number 3709987].
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U1 0
U2 17
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1747-7891
EI 1878-0059
J9 ENVIRON HAZARDS-UK
JI Environ. Hazards
PY 2017
VL 16
IS 2
SI SI
BP 180
EP 191
DI 10.1080/17477891.2016.1275502
PG 12
WC Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA ET1ER
UT WOS:000400009900007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rogers, S
   Xue, T
AF Rogers, Sarah
   Xue, Tao
TI Resettlement and climate change vulnerability: Evidence from rural China
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Resettlement; Vulnerability; China; Adaptation; Livelihood security;
   Migration
ID ENVIRONMENTAL RESETTLEMENT; INVOLUNTARY RESETTLEMENT; ECOLOGICAL
   RESETTLEMENT; COPING STRATEGIES; INNER-MONGOLIA; LOESS PLATEAU;
   MIGRATION; ADAPTATION; DROUGHT; CONTEXT
AB The literature on migration and climate change has become increasingly attuned to the role of climatic factors in already complex migration dynamics, and amid different kinds of mobility. However, to date little evidence has been provided of the relationship between resettlement and climate change, including the degree to which resettlement may shape the vulnerability of households or communities. In this article we ask: is there any evidence that resettlement may be a driver of vulnerability and if so, what factors make resettled households more vulnerable when compared to non-resettled households? These questions are considered with reference to new evidence drawn from a livelihoods-based vulnerability analysis in a drought-prone, poverty county in China's Shanxi Province, which encompassed households involved in local poverty resettlement programs. Evidence of the characteristics of resettled households compared to non-resettled households shows that resettlement adversely impacts on the household asset base, particularly in terms of financial and natural capital. It may therefore be a driver of vulnerability. At a time when the Chinese government is repackaging resettlement as a climate change adaptation measure, this article provides evidence that resettlement as it is currently practiced has the potential to amplify rather than alleviate household vulnerability to climate change. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Rogers, Sarah; Xue, Tao] Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, Carlton, Vic 3053, Australia.
C3 University of Melbourne
RP Rogers, S (corresponding author), Univ Melbourne, Sch Geog, 221 Bouverie St, Carlton, Vic 3053, Australia.
EM rogerssm@unimelb.edu.au
OI xue, tao/0000-0002-5492-4685
FU NCCARF SEI-network Adaptation Leadership Award; University of Melbourne
   Overseas Research Experience Scholarship
FX The authors gratefully acknowledge the participants of this study in Ji
   County for their patience, insight and hospitality. Thanks to Professor
   Michael Webber for comments on an early draft and to two anonymous
   reviewers for their detailed and constructive feedback. This research
   was supported by a NCCARF SEI-network Adaptation Leadership Award and a
   University of Melbourne Overseas Research Experience Scholarship.
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NR 70
TC 66
Z9 72
U1 6
U2 112
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD NOV
PY 2015
VL 35
BP 62
EP 69
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2015.08.005
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA CZ0AI
UT WOS:000366767100007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Naranjo-Mendoza, C
   López-Villada, J
   Gaona, G
   Labus, J
AF Naranjo-Mendoza, Carlos
   Lopez-Villada, Jesus
   Gaona, Gabriel
   Labus, Jerko
GP ASME
TI PERFORMANCE ANALYSIS WITH FUTURE PREDICTIONS OF DIFFERENT SOLAR COOLING
   SYSTEMS IN GUAYAQUIL, ECUADOR
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASME 8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENERGY
   SUSTAINABILITY, 2014, VOL 2
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT ASME 8th International Conference on Energy Sustainability
CY JUN 30-JUL 02, 2014
CL Seaport World Trade Ctr, Boston, MA
SP ASME, Adv Energy Syst, ASME, Solar Energy Div
HO Seaport World Trade Ctr
ID SIMULATION; LOCATIONS; ENERGY
AB This paper presents a comparative analysis of three different solar cooling system configurations developed for a case study building in Guayaquil, Ecuador. Guayaquil is a city located at the Ecuadorian coast with an average annual temperature of 25 degrees C. The city's need for air conditioning throughout the year and the relatively intense solar radiation provide a great opportunity for implementation of solar cooling systems. The first cooling system includes a 175 kWc single-effect absorption chiller powered by evacuated tubes solar thermal collectors. This system was compared with two 140 kWc compression chiller systems (air-cooled (AC) and water-cooled (WC)) powered by grid-connected photovoltaics. Both constant flow rate (CFR) and variable flow rate (VFR) of chilled water were analyzed. The three systems have to satisfy a cooling demand of the top floor in one governmental building (app. 1296 m(2)) which was selected as case study. Additionally, two 140 kWc conventional compression chiller systems (AC and WC) were included in the comparison as reference systems. Cooling demand of the building was simulated in EnergyPlus and coupled with the appropriate system configurations developed in TRNSYS. The weather file (TMY) was developed based on real meteorological data collected in the last decade. The present analysis was extended with the prediction scenarios for the years 2020, 2050 and 2080 using climate change adapted weather files.
C1 [Naranjo-Mendoza, Carlos; Lopez-Villada, Jesus; Gaona, Gabriel; Labus, Jerko] Natl Inst Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy, Quito, Ecuador.
RP Naranjo-Mendoza, C (corresponding author), Natl Inst Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy, Quito, Ecuador.
RI Naranjo-Mendoza, Carlos/J-7640-2019; Gaona, Gabriel/JBS-1779-2023;
   Lopez-Villada, Jesus/O-6053-2016
OI Gaona, Gabriel V./0000-0003-4666-2248; Lopez-Villada,
   Jesus/0000-0002-4279-1416; Naranjo-Mendoza, Carlos/0000-0002-9356-5662
CR [Anonymous], 2004, 9012004 ASHRAE
   ANSI, 2008, EN PERF BUILD OV EN
   Beccali M., SOLAR ENERGY
   CONELEC, 2013, PLAN MAESTR EL 2013
   CONELEC, 2012, STAT EC EL SECT
   Dickinson J. K., 2010, ASME C P, V2010, P217
   Eicker U, 2014, ENERG BUILDINGS, V70, P207, DOI 10.1016/j.enbuild.2013.11.061
   Fong JS, 2013, APPL THERM ENG, V57, P81, DOI 10.1016/j.applthermaleng.2013.03.004
   Henning HM, 2012, ENRGY PROCED, V30, P633, DOI 10.1016/j.egypro.2012.11.073
   Jentsch MF, 2013, RENEW ENERG, V55, P514, DOI 10.1016/j.renene.2012.12.049
   Ohunakin OS, 2013, APPL ENERG, V112, P152, DOI 10.1016/j.apenergy.2013.05.072
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NR 13
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 3
PU AMER SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS
PI NEW YORK
PA THREE PARK AVENUE, NEW YORK, NY 10016-5990 USA
BN 978-0-7918-4587-5
PY 2014
AR V002T10A013
PG 7
WC Construction & Building Technology; Energy & Fuels; Engineering,
   Mechanical
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Energy & Fuels; Engineering
GA BD4XR
UT WOS:000361162400046
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lee, CS
   Hoes, P
   Cóstola, D
   Hensen, JLM
AF Lee, Chul-sung
   Hoes, P.
   Costola, D.
   Hensen, J. L. M.
TI Assessing the performance potential of climate adaptive greenhouse
   shells
SO ENERGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate adaptive greenhouse shells; Multi-objective dynamic
   optimization; Adaptation period; Greenhouse performance simulation
ID NEAR-INFRARED RADIATION; OF-THE-ART; SOLAR CONCENTRATORS; CLOSED
   GREENHOUSE; CROP YIELD; ENERGY; DESIGN; LIGHT; GROWTH; FILMS
AB Agriculture is responsible for 7.2% of the final energy consumption in the Netherlands; most energy is used for heating and lighting in the greenhouse sector. Currently, the greenhouse sector faces major challenges in reducing its energy demand while increasing crop quality and quantity. One route to improve the performance of industrial greenhouses could be based on using climate adaptive shells. These shells are capable of changing their thermal and optical properties on an hourly, daily, or seasonal basis to optimize performance. The climate adaptive shell concept shows considerable potential for performance improvement in the building sector. However, its potential for the greenhouse sector is yet unknown. This paper quantifies this potential by predicting the energy savings and the increase in net profit using a new framework based on numerical simulation and optimization techniques. The simulation results show that climate adaptive greenhouse shells increase net profit between 7% and 20% for tomato producing Dutch greenhouses. Monthly and hourly adaptation resulted in considerable primary energy savings of 23% and 37%, respectively. It is expected that the predicted net profit increase and energy savings will drive the attention of the greenhouse industry towards the development of climate adaptive greenhouse shells. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Lee, Chul-sung] Hanbat Natl Univ, Dept Architectural Engn, Deajeon, South Korea.
   [Hoes, P.; Hensen, J. L. M.] Eindhoven Univ Technol, Dept Built Environm, Eindhoven, Netherlands.
   [Costola, D.] Univ Strathclyde, Dept Mech Aerosp Engn, Glasgow, Lanark, Scotland.
C3 Eindhoven University of Technology; University of Strathclyde
RP Lee, CS (corresponding author), Hanbat Natl Univ, Dept Architectural Engn, Deajeon, South Korea.
EM cslee.skor@gmail.com
RI Hensen, Jan/J-6100-2013; Hoes, Pieter-Jan/AAO-4139-2020
OI Hoes, Pieter-Jan/0000-0002-8092-8751
FU Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture and Innovation, The
   Netherlands, as part of the project EOS-LT project -Climate Adaptive
   Glastuinbouw: Inverse Modelling (CAGIM)
FX This research was funded by Ministry of Economic Affairs, Agriculture
   and Innovation, The Netherlands, as part of the project EOS-LT project
   -Climate Adaptive Glastuinbouw: Inverse Modelling (CAGIM). This
   financial contribution is gratefully acknowledged.
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NR 67
TC 14
Z9 14
U1 2
U2 13
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0360-5442
EI 1873-6785
J9 ENERGY
JI Energy
PD MAY 15
PY 2019
VL 175
BP 534
EP 545
DI 10.1016/j.energy.2019.03.074
PG 12
WC Thermodynamics; Energy & Fuels
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Thermodynamics; Energy & Fuels
GA HW9GO
UT WOS:000466999400044
OA Green Published, Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Mzimela, JH
   Moyo, I
AF Mzimela, Jabulile H.
   Moyo, Inocent
TI Indigenous Knowledge System and Agricultural Drought Adaptation in the
   uMkhanyakude District Municipality, KwaZulu-Natal
SO JOURNAL OF ASIAN AND AFRICAN STUDIES
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Small-scale farmers; agricultural drought; indigenous knowledge system;
   adaptation; uMkhanyakude District Municipality
ID FEMINIST POLITICAL ECOLOGY; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; COPING
   STRATEGIES; FARMERS; AFRICA; GENDER; INTERSECTIONALITY; DECOLONIALITY;
   COMMUNITIES; PERSPECTIVE
AB By deploying an intersectional feminist political ecology analysis, this paper explores small-scale farmers' (SSFs') experiences and responses to agricultural drought in the uMkhanyakude District Municipality, South Africa. A mixed methods approach was employed, incorporating a household questionnaire survey, and analysed using Microsoft Excel complemented by qualitative observations and document review, both of which underwent reflexive thematic analysis. The impacts of drought were particularly pronounced in the district, affecting agricultural productivity through reduced crop growth, extensive crop failures and increased livestock mortality. In addition, the study's findings reveal how structural aspects of gender, shaped by social and cultural norms and institutions, can exacerbate gendered experiences of drought. SSFs actively leveraged the indigenous knowledge system (IKS) for adaptation, challenging dominant Eurocentric approaches. The efficacy of IKS in agriculture and its role in enhancing SSFs' resilience to drought underscores its indispensability in policy and adaptation programmes. Furthermore, the study highlights potential ways to address and mitigate disparities among SSFs by avoiding simplistic and apolitical adaptation measures. Instead, it advocates for nuanced and contextually appropriate adaptation measures to ensure effective and equitable adaptation.
C1 [Mzimela, Jabulile H.; Moyo, Inocent] Univ Zululand, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Private Bag X1001, ZA-3886 Richards Bay, South Africa.
C3 University of Zululand
RP Mzimela, JH (corresponding author), Univ Zululand, Dept Geog & Environm Studies, Private Bag X1001, ZA-3886 Richards Bay, South Africa.
EM jabulilemzimela@gmail.com
OI Mzimela, Jabulile H./0000-0001-9859-780X
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NR 117
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
PI THOUSAND OAKS
PA 2455 TELLER RD, THOUSAND OAKS, CA 91320 USA
SN 0021-9096
EI 1745-2538
J9 J ASIAN AFR STUD
JI J. Asian Afr. Stud.
PD 2024 SEP 18
PY 2024
DI 10.1177/00219096241275391
EA SEP 2024
PG 25
WC Area Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Area Studies
GA G6Q8Q
UT WOS:001317870300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Abeysekara, WCSM
   Siriwardana, M
   Meng, SM
AF Abeysekara, Walimuni Chamindri Sewanka Mendis
   Siriwardana, Mahinda
   Meng, Samuel
TI Economic consequences of climate change impacts on the agricultural
   sector of South Asia: A case study of Sri Lanka
SO ECONOMIC ANALYSIS AND POLICY
LA English
DT Article
DE Agriculture; Climate change; Computable General Equilibrium; Food
   security
ID FOOD SECURITY; CHANGE ADAPTATION; PRODUCTIVITY; SCENARIOS
AB Scientific evidence suggests that agriculture will be adversely affected by climate change globally in the near future, with the countries and small islands of South Asia projected to be amongst the most vulnerable. This study uses the ORANI-G-SL, a single-country, static computable general equilibrium model to investigate the economic impacts of climate change-induced agricultural productivity changes on Sri Lanka, as a South Asian case study. In comparison with a baseline scenario, the results show reductions in the output of most agricultural crops will cause increased consumer prices for these agri-cultural commodities, with a consequential decline in overall household consumption within next few decades. The projected decline in crop production and increases in food prices will enhance the potential for food insecurity. Thus, climate change will negatively impact the overall GDP and most of the macro and microeconomic variables of the Sri Lankan economy. These results highlight the need for future scientific research on climate change adaptation strategies and the importance of developing policy responses to counter adverse effects on agriculture and food security.(c) 2022 Economic Society of Australia, Queensland. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Abeysekara, Walimuni Chamindri Sewanka Mendis; Siriwardana, Mahinda; Meng, Samuel] Univ New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
   [Abeysekara, Walimuni Chamindri Sewanka Mendis] Univ Ruhuna, Matara, Sri Lanka.
C3 University of New England; University Ruhuna
RP Abeysekara, WCSM (corresponding author), Univ New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
EM chamindri.abeysekara@gmail.com
OI Siriwardana, Mahinda/0000-0003-2960-9701; Abeysekara,
   Chamindri/0000-0002-3997-553X
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NR 51
TC 22
Z9 22
U1 9
U2 25
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0313-5926
J9 ECON ANAL POLICY
JI Econ. Anal. Policy
PD MAR
PY 2023
VL 77
BP 435
EP 450
DI 10.1016/j.eap.2022.12.003
EA DEC 2022
PG 16
WC Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA 7I6BM
UT WOS:000903970800006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cousins, JJ
   Hill, DT
AF Cousins, Joshua J.
   Hill, Dustin T.
TI Green infrastructure, stormwater, and the financialization of municipal
   environmental governance
SO JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY & PLANNING
LA English
DT Article
DE Green infrastructure; financialization; stormwater; climate change
   adaptation; environmental governance
AB Municipalities large and small are grappling with how to address enduring water quality challenges stemming from the impermeability of much of the built environment and how to address shifting precipitation patterns due to climate change. Finding ways to fund and finance the redesign, retrofit, and adaptation of the built environment, however, presents a major obstacle in an environment of municipal fiscal austerity. In this paper, we examine how municipalities are adopting different fee structures and financial tools to pay for stormwater abatement through green and gray infrastructure and improve their capacity to deal with the impacts of climate change. Drawing on a survey of 233 municipalities and interviews with municipal leaders, we show that transitioning towards green infrastructure in municipal stormwater and climate change planning is a broad goal among most respondents, but stormwater fee systems are typically not sufficient for meeting regulatory mandates as well as the operation and maintenance costs needed to replace or repair urban water infrastructure. This shortfall has led many municipalities to use a host of other financial tools, such as credit and mitigation banking and social impact and green bonds. We suggest this shift has important implications for achieving sustainability and ensuring just transitions.
C1 [Cousins, Joshua J.] SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Dept Environm Studies, 106 Marshall Hall, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA.
   [Hill, Dustin T.] SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Grad Program Environm Sci, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA.
C3 State University of New York (SUNY) System; State University of New York
   (SUNY) College of Environmental Science & Forestry; State University of
   New York (SUNY) System; State University of New York (SUNY) College of
   Environmental Science & Forestry
RP Cousins, JJ (corresponding author), SUNY Coll Environm Sci & Forestry, Dept Environm Studies, 106 Marshall Hall, Syracuse, NY 13210 USA.
EM jcousins@esf.edu
RI Hill, Dustin/HOF-9389-2023
OI Cousins, Joshua/0000-0003-1835-6024; Hill, Dustin/0000-0002-4073-6093
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NR 88
TC 35
Z9 37
U1 5
U2 59
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1523-908X
EI 1522-7200
J9 J ENVIRON POL PLAN
JI J. Environ. Pol. Plan.
PD SEP 3
PY 2021
VL 23
IS 5
SI SI
BP 581
EP 598
DI 10.1080/1523908X.2021.1893164
EA MAR 2021
PG 18
WC Development Studies; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Public Administration
GA US3QN
UT WOS:000624736600001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Sullivan-Wiley, K
   Cornett, M
   Musengezi, J
   Shyamsundar, P
AF Sullivan-Wiley, Kira
   Cornett, Meredith
   Musengezi, Jessica
   Shyamsundar, Priya
TI Climate-Resilient Forest Restoration on Public Lands in Minnesota's
   Northwoods Region: A Behavior Change Case Study
SO CASE STUDIES IN THE ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE forest restoration; behavior change; adaptive conservation; resilient
   conservation; social science; Minnesota
AB Our case asked: How can social science factor into conservation program design as it relates to partnership development and behavioral "nudges"? How might these tools be used to influence public forest management decisions on a landscape scale? Our results indicate that using a combination of so-called behavioral "nudges" and intentional partnership collaboration, The Nature Conservancy's projects have helped influence the process by which large public landholders incorporate climate change adaptation and resilience into decisions about the siting of restoration projects, and the composition of species used in forest restoration projects. Although the project in this case was not originally motivated by social science considerations, including those falling under the heading of behavioral science, it nonetheless illustrates how common-sense strategies, developed through partnerships, can be useful in creating long-term change. The case further illustrates how these changes could be amplified through a more intentional application of behavioral and social science tools. In this case, the "nudges" included demonstration sites, partner commitments and championship, and decisions tools. This case will help readers to understand how social science, and more specifically behavioral science, may be used to augment collaborative partnerships to achieve change in forest restoration practices.
C1 [Sullivan-Wiley, Kira] Boston Univ, Frederick S Pardee Ctr Res Longer Ranger Future, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
   [Cornett, Meredith; Musengezi, Jessica; Shyamsundar, Priya] Nature Conservancy, Arlington, VA USA.
C3 Boston University; Nature Conservancy
RP Sullivan-Wiley, K (corresponding author), Boston Univ, Frederick S Pardee Ctr Res Longer Ranger Future, Boston, MA 02215 USA.
EM kswiley@bu.edu
RI Cornett, Meredith/G-7705-2014; Shyamsundar, Priya/AAP-3411-2021
OI Cornett, Meredith/0000-0002-4732-7655
FU Frederick S. Pardee Center for Research on the Longer-Range future;
   Wildlife Conservation Society's Climate Adaptation Fund; Doris Duke
   Charitable Foundation; The Nature Conservancy through the Cox Family
   Fund for Science and Research; Carolyn M. Crosby Foundation
FX Funding for KSW came from the Frederick S. Pardee Center for Research on
   the Longer-Range future. Case project activities were funded by two
   grants from the Wildlife Conservation Society's Climate Adaptation Fund,
   originating from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation. Additional
   financial support for this work was generously provided by The Nature
   Conservancy through the Cox Family Fund for Science and Research, and
   the Carolyn M. Crosby Foundation.
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NR 28
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 2
U2 2
PU UNIV CALIFORNIA PRESS
PI OAKLAND
PA 155 GRAND AVE, SUITE 400, OAKLAND, CA 94612-3758 USA
SN 2473-9510
J9 CASE STUD ENVIRON
JI Case Stud. Environ.
PY 2021
VL 5
IS 1
DI 10.1525/cse.2021.1263704
PG 9
WC Education & Educational Research; Environmental Studies
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Education & Educational Research; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA YE4EC
UT WOS:000741080100013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU ZepedaRivas, D
   Moreno, SA
   Alvarez, JR
AF ZepedaRivas, Daniel
   Moreno, Sergi Aguacil
   Rodriguez Alvarez, Jorge
BE Scartezzini, JL
   Smith, B
TI Effectiveness of passive climate change adaptation measures in
   Switzerland: A climate-based analysis on natural ventilation and
   overheating risks reduction in dwellings
SO CARBON-NEUTRAL CITIES - ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLES IN THE DIGITAL
   ERA (CISBAT 2021)
SE Journal of Physics Conference Series
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT International Hybrid Conference on Carbon Neutral Cities - Energy
   Efficiency and Renewables in the Digital Era (CISBAT)
CY SEP 08-10, 2021
CL Ecole Polytechnique Fed Lausanne, Solar Energy & Bldg Phys Lab,
   Lausanne, SWITZERLAND
SP Swiss Fed Off Energy
HO Ecole Polytechnique Fed Lausanne, Solar Energy & Bldg Phys Lab
DE building energy codes; climate change; adaptation; energy performance;
   overheating risk
AB Building energy codes have been implemented in Switzerland as well as across the world to reduce building energy consumption, however, due to the progressive effect of climate change phenomena and the precipitate change in occupancy patterns due to the global pandemic, their effectiveness and limitations must be constantly re-examined. This paper explores the effectiveness of natural ventilation as a passive cooling strategy, as well as the overheating patterns in dwellings across the Swiss territory. The work is based on a climate-based simulation model at a territorial scale, from which the building performance is further analysed considering the heating energy consumption and overheating risk hours above 26.5 degrees C. The effectiveness of natural ventilation through the operable window operable area in reducing overheating risk was also estimated. The results show the effectiveness across the whole territory of the current regulation (SIA 380/1:2016), which is focused on the performance of the building envelope to reduce heat losses. An unattended alarming overheating pattern was spotted in locations with altitudes below 1500 meters as a direct consequence of the climate change phenomena, hence a series of recommendations are proposed to update and improve the current legal requirements.
C1 [ZepedaRivas, Daniel; Rodriguez Alvarez, Jorge] Univ A Coruna, Doctoral Sch Architecture, La Coruna, Spain.
   [Moreno, Sergi Aguacil] Ecole Polytech Fed Lausanne EPFL, Building2050 Grp, Fribourg, Switzerland.
   [Rodriguez Alvarez, Jorge] Architectural Assoc Sch Architecture, London, England.
C3 Universidade da Coruna; Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain;
   Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne
RP Moreno, SA (corresponding author), Ecole Polytech Fed Lausanne EPFL, Building2050 Grp, Fribourg, Switzerland.
EM sergi.aguacil@epfl.ch
OI Zepeda, Daniel/0000-0001-9441-1203
FU INDITEX research scholarship; Ecole polytechnique federale de Lausanne
   (EPFL); University of A Coruna
FX This research work was funded by the INDITEX research scholarship on the
   framework of a research stage at Building2050 group, EPFL Fribourg,
   Smart Living Lab. The authors also thank the Ecole polytechnique
   federale de Lausanne (EPFL) and University of A Coruna for its support.
CR [Anonymous], 2020, METEONORM HDB 1, P84
   FSO, 2019, BUILD DWELL HOUS CON
   Krarti M, 2021, RENEW SUST ENERG REV, V143, DOI 10.1016/j.rser.2021.110888
   NCC, 2018, CH2018 CLIM SCEN SWI
   Ragettli MS, 2017, ENVIRON RES, V158, P703, DOI 10.1016/j.envres.2017.07.021
   SIA, 2015, 2024 DONN UT LOC EN
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   SIA, 2016, 3801 SIA
   SIA, 2021, 279 BANQ DONN MAT CO
   SIA, 2014, 180 PROT THERM PROT
   WMO, 2018, WMO-No. 10
NR 11
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 6
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1742-6588
EI 1742-6596
J9 J PHYS CONF SER
PY 2021
VL 2042
AR 012151
DI 10.1088/1742-6596/2042/1/012151
PG 6
WC Construction & Building Technology; Green & Sustainable Science &
   Technology; Energy & Fuels; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Science & Technology - Other Topics;
   Energy & Fuels; Public Administration
GA BS4ZU
UT WOS:000724676100151
OA gold, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Villegas-Palacio, C
   Berrouet, L
   Marsiglia, S
AF Villegas-Palacio, Clara
   Berrouet, Lina
   Marsiglia, Sindy
TI Adaptive Capacity of Households to Degradation of Ecosystem Services: A
   Case Study in the Colombian Andes
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Environmental change; Ecosystem services; Adaptive capacity; Social
   system; Beneficiaries
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; SOCIAL VULNERABILITY; ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGE;
   SMALLHOLDER FARMERS; NATIONAL-LEVEL; FOOD SECURITY; LAND-USE; FRAMEWORK;
   INDICATORS; STRATEGIES
AB The adaptive capacity (AC) of social systems to degradation of ecosystem services is defined as the response capacity of the system to a threat, such as changes in supply and delivery of ecosystem services (ES). In this paper, we propose an adaptive capacity composite indicator vis-a-vis the loss or degradation of ecosystem services that can be evaluated at household level in rural areas. For the estimation of the AC composite indicator, we evaluated 16 variables grouped into six categories that were previously validated with a group of experts in the area. The variables were evaluated in ten types of household profiles identified in relation with the services of water provision and erosion control in the Riogrande Basin in Colombia. The composite indicator is built both through experts' focus groups to find weights of the variables and categories and principal component analysis. In both methods, variables such as institutional efficiency, distribution and availability of information, technology and innovation, as well as local ecological knowledge were the main determinants of AC of the households.
C1 [Villegas-Palacio, Clara; Marsiglia, Sindy] Univ Nacl Colombia Sede Medellin, Fac Minas, Dept Geociencias & Medio Ambiente, Medellin, Colombia.
   [Berrouet, Lina] Univ Antioquia, Fac Ingn, Escuela Ambiental, Medellin, Colombia.
C3 Universidad Nacional de Colombia; Universidad de Antioquia
RP Villegas-Palacio, C (corresponding author), Univ Nacl Colombia Sede Medellin, Fac Minas, Dept Geociencias & Medio Ambiente, Medellin, Colombia.
EM civilleg@unal.edu.co
OI Berrouet, Lina/0000-0003-3107-6852; Villegas-Palacio,
   Clara/0000-0002-8258-9191
FU project "Trayectorias de sistemas socioecologicos y sus determinantes en
   cuencas estrategicas en un contexto de cambio ambiental" [110180863961,
   808-2018]
FX Funding from the project "Trayectorias de sistemas socioecologicos y sus
   determinantes en cuencas estrategicas en un contexto de cambio
   ambiental. Codigo 110180863961" Convocatoria 808-2018 Proyectos de
   ciencia, tecnologia e innovacion y su contribucion a los retos de
   pais-Colciencias.
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NR 93
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 1
U2 19
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA ONE NEW YORK PLAZA, SUITE 4600, NEW YORK, NY, UNITED STATES
SN 0364-152X
EI 1432-1009
J9 ENVIRON MANAGE
JI Environ. Manage.
PD AUG
PY 2020
VL 66
IS 2
BP 162
EP 179
DI 10.1007/s00267-020-01305-5
EA MAY 2020
PG 18
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA MC7HO
UT WOS:000536741900001
PM 32476040
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Alston, M
   Clarke, J
   Whittenbury, K
AF Alston, Margaret
   Clarke, Josephine
   Whittenbury, Kerri
TI Limits to adaptation: Reducing irrigation water in the Murray-Darling
   Basin dairy communities
SO JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Limits; Water security; Dairy communities; Social justice
ID ASSESSING SOCIOECONOMIC VULNERABILITY; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION;
   ADAPTIVE CAPACITY; RESILIENCE; AUSTRALIA; FRAMEWORK; IMPACTS; JUSTICE
AB Increasing environmental disasters are creating significant uncertainty for farm families and their communities across the world. One site critically affected is the Murray-Darling Basin area of Australia, an area known as the food bowl of Australia. Following a lengthy drought at the turn of the century concerns were raised about water quality and river health. This led successive governments to introduce policies to systematically reduce water available for irrigated agriculture. The Murray-Darling Basin Plan was developed by the Commonwealth government and is designed to secure water savings from irrigators and to direct those water savings to the stressed natural environment. This paper focuses on the impact of these changes on irrigation dairy families and their communities in northern Victoria. Using a model designed to test the limits to adaptation, we draw out the constraints, limits and barriers to adaptation for dairy families and their communities coping with reduced water access. This model highlights the types of socially just and fair interventions necessary to assist adaptation and foctises attention on thresholds and traps that may prevent adaptation. The model is relevant to other areas where climate changes and environmental disasters are shaping inevitable change.
C1 [Alston, Margaret; Clarke, Josephine; Whittenbury, Kerri] Monash Univ, Dept Social Work, Gender Leadership & Social Sustainabil GLASS Res, Caulfield Campus,Dandenong Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3145, Australia.
C3 Monash University
RP Alston, M (corresponding author), Monash Univ, Dept Social Work, Gender Leadership & Social Sustainabil GLASS Res, Caulfield Campus,Dandenong Rd, Melbourne, Vic 3145, Australia.
EM Margaret.alston@monash.edu; Josephine.Clarke@monash.edu;
   Kerri.whittenbury@monash.edu
OI Alston, Margaret/0000-0001-9057-7767; Clarke,
   Josephine/0000-0002-6202-2067
FU Australian Research Council (ARC linkage grant) [LP130100676]; Geoffrey
   Gardiner Dairy Foundation, Melbourne; Australian Research Council
   [LP130100676] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
FX This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (ARC linkage
   grant number LP130100676); and the Geoffrey Gardiner Dairy Foundation,
   Melbourne.
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NR 55
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 1
U2 34
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0743-0167
J9 J RURAL STUD
JI J. Rural Stud.
PD FEB
PY 2018
VL 58
BP 93
EP 102
DI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2017.12.026
PG 10
WC Geography; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Public Administration
GA FW8IE
UT WOS:000425574500009
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Opiyo, F
   Wasonga, OV
   Nyangito, MM
   Mureithi, SM
   Obando, J
   Munang, R
AF Opiyo, Francis
   Wasonga, Oliver V.
   Nyangito, Moses M.
   Mureithi, Stephen M.
   Obando, Joy
   Munang, Richard
TI Determinants of perceptions of climate change and adaptation among
   Turkana pastoralists in northwestern Kenya
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Turkana; adaptation strategies; resilience; drought; climate variability
   and change
ID CATTLE PRODUCTION; VARIABILITY; IMPACTS; VULNERABILITY; STRATEGIES;
   SELECTION; ETHIOPIA; OPTIONS
AB There is a growing concern that climate variability and change, combined with other environmental, social and political pressures, may overwhelm resilience of pastoral systems if local adaptation strategies are not strengthened. Understanding pastoralists' perception of and response to climatic change is necessary for sustainable adaptation strategies. Systematic and purposive sampling techniques were used to select 302 households in Turkana County of northwestern Kenya. Descriptive statistics and Heckman probit model were used to analyse the data obtained from the household's interviews. The results show that majority of households' perceive rise in temperatures and rainfall variability over the past three decades. Pastoralists' perception of climate change was significantly (p<.05) associated with gender of the household head, livestock ownership, herd size and access to extension services. Heckman's sample selectivity probit model revealed that factors influencing pastoralist's choices of climate change adaptation include gender and education level of the household head, household size, wealth in terms of livestock ownership, distance to markets, access to credit and extension services. We conclude that as a prerequisite for long-term commitment to household's climate resilience, policies and programmes should aim at improving these factors.
C1 [Opiyo, Francis; Wasonga, Oliver V.; Nyangito, Moses M.; Mureithi, Stephen M.] Univ Nairobi, Dept Land Resources Management & Agr Technol LARM, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Opiyo, Francis] United Nations Dev Programme, Dryland Dev Ctr, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Wasonga, Oliver V.] German Inst Trop & Subtrop Agr DITSL, Witzenhausen, Germany.
   [Obando, Joy] Kenyatta Univ, Dept Geog, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Munang, Richard] United Nations Environm Programme, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 University of Nairobi; Kenyatta University
RP Opiyo, F (corresponding author), Univ Nairobi, Dept Land Resources Management & Agr Technol LARM, Nairobi, Kenya.; Opiyo, F (corresponding author), United Nations Dev Programme, Dryland Dev Ctr, Nairobi, Kenya.
EM francis.opiyo@undp.org
RI ; Mureithi, Stephen M./H-3609-2019
OI Wasonga, Prof. Oliver/0000-0002-5929-6091; Mureithi, Stephen
   M./0000-0002-2616-6995
FU African Climate Change Fellowship Program (ACCFP)/START, though the
   University of Dare salaam, Tanzania; Kenyatta University; Department of
   Land Resources Management and Agricultural Technology (LARMAT),
   University of Nairobi, Kenya; Red Cross/Red Crescent Climate
   Centre/START and UNISDR under Climate and Development Knowledge Network;
   TWAS small grant
FX This study was supported by African Climate Change Fellowship Program
   (ACCFP)/START, though the University of Dare salaam, Tanzania, in
   collaboration with Kenyatta University and Department of Land Resources
   Management and Agricultural Technology (LARMAT), University of Nairobi,
   Kenya. Additional financial support was provided by the Red Cross/Red
   Crescent Climate Centre/START and UNISDR under Climate and Development
   Knowledge Network and TWAS small grant.
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NR 43
TC 53
Z9 57
U1 1
U2 27
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD MAR 14
PY 2016
VL 8
IS 2
BP 179
EP 189
DI 10.1080/17565529.2015.1034231
PG 11
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA DH0AI
UT WOS:000372444500008
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Etzold, B
   Ahmed, AU
   Hassan, SR
   Neelormi, S
   Afifi, T
AF Etzold, Benjamin
   Ahmed, Ahsan Uddin
   Hassan, Selim Reza
   Neelormi, Sharmind
   Afifi, Tamer
BE McLeman, R
   Schade, J
   Faist, T
TI Rainfall Variability, Hunger, and Social Inequality, and Their Relative
   Influences on Migration: Evidence from Bangladesh
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MIGRATION AND SOCIAL INEQUALITY
SE Advances in Global Change Research
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT Conference on Environmental Degradation, Conflict and Forced Migration
CY DEC, 2012
CL Bielefeld Univ, Bielefeld, GERMANY
SP European Cooperat Sci & Technol Act IS1101 Migrat & Climate Change, Bielefeld Univ, Ctr Interdisciplinary Res, Collaborat Res Ctr
HO Bielefeld Univ
DE Climate change adaptation; Food security; Social inequality; Labour
   migration; Seasonal migration; Bangladesh migration
ID FOOD SECURITY; DHAKA
AB Research on climate change and migration usually assesses the effects of natural hazards and/or creeping environmental degradation on people's livelihoods and their migration. This chapter looks at changing rainfall patterns, local perception of these changes, and the decision to migrate, or not, to cope with rainfall variability and hunger. Based on empirical evidence from a case study undertaken in Kurigram District in northern Bangladesh, this chapter addresses four key questions: (1) Is the rural population sensitive to rainfall variability? (2) How is rainfall variability related to food security? (3) Which labour-migration systems can be used by the local people to cope with environmental shocks and adapt to change? and (4) Do people migrate for work to cope with and adapt to the effects of rainfall variability or because of food insecurity and social inequality? Although rainfall variability can play an important role in people's decisions to migrate, we argue that migration from the region is not driven so much by climate changes as it is by the persistent local patterns of social inequality and food insecurity coupled with the structural economic disparities that exist in Bangladesh.
C1 [Etzold, Benjamin] Univ Bonn, Dept Geog, Bonn, Germany.
   [Ahmed, Ahsan Uddin] Ctr Global Change, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Hassan, Selim Reza] Solidaridad Network, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Neelormi, Sharmind] Jahangirnagar Univ, Dept Econ, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
   [Afifi, Tamer] United Nations Univ, Inst Environm & Human Secur UNU EHS, Bonn, Germany.
C3 University of Bonn; Jahangirnagar University
RP Etzold, B (corresponding author), Univ Bonn, Dept Geog, Bonn, Germany.
EM etzold@giub.uni-bonn.de; ahsan.ua@gmail.com;
   selim@solidaridadnetwork.org; neelormi1@yahoo.com; afifi@ehs.unu.edu
RI Etzold, Benjamin/AAN-6223-2020
OI Etzold, Benjamin/0000-0002-1109-7640
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NR 27
TC 7
Z9 8
U1 4
U2 21
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA PO BOX 17, 3300 AA DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1574-0919
BN 978-3-319-25796-9; 978-3-319-25794-5
J9 ADV GLOB CHANGE RES
JI Adv. Glob. Change Res.
PY 2016
VL 61
BP 27
EP 41
DI 10.1007/978-3-319-25796-9_2
PG 15
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA BF4MR
UT WOS:000381370800002
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Aerts, JCJH
   Botzen, WJW
   Werners, SE
AF Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.
   Botzen, W. J. Wouter
   Werners, Saskia E.
TI Portfolios of adaptation investments in water management
SO MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION STRATEGIES FOR GLOBAL CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
DE Adaptation; Decision making under risk; Flood risk management; Modern
   portfolio theory; Uncertainty
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; RESOURCES MANAGEMENT; FLOOD INSURANCE; VULNERABILITY;
   RISK; DIVERSIFICATION; UNCERTAINTY; FRAMEWORK; FUTURE; LESSONS
AB This study explores how Modern Portfolio Theory (MPT) can guide investment decisions in integrated water resources management (IWRM) and climate change adaptation under uncertainty. The objectives of the paper are to: (i) explain the concept of diversification to reduce risk, as formulated in MPT; (ii) discuss the conditions for applying MPT to IWRM, and provide examples of these; and (iii) analyze the opportunities and limitations of applying MPT to the design of IWRM and adaptation policies. It is shown that MPT can be applied when a case meets four conditions: (1) there is more than one possible investment at a given time; (2) these investments are subject to risk; (3) there is information about the historical and/or expected return of these investments; and (4) the same conditions do not affect all investments equally, meaning that their returns are imperfectly correlated. Analysis of a case study Noorderkwartier in the Netherlands concludes that MPT can contribute to designing portfolios of combinations of investments in flood risk management-technical measures, spatial planning and insurance-which are robust to uncertainty in long-term projections such as present in climate change scenarios.
C1 [Aerts, Jeroen C. J. H.; Botzen, W. J. Wouter] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
   [Werners, Saskia E.] Wageningen Univ & Res Ctr, Wageningen, Netherlands.
C3 Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam; Wageningen University & Research
RP Botzen, WJW (corresponding author), Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Inst Environm Studies, De Boelelaan 1087, NL-1081 HV Amsterdam, Netherlands.
EM wouter.botzen@vu.nl
RI Aerts, Jeroen/M-8431-2013; Botzen, Wouter/L-3123-2013
OI werners, saskia/0000-0002-1705-4318; Botzen, Wouter/0000-0002-8563-4963
FU Veni grant of Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO); EU
   FP7 project ENHANCE
FX We thank Gert Becker, Oleg Sheremet and 2 reviewers for their
   constructive comments. We thank Olivier Hoes for providing us with
   information on the Noorderkwartier case study. This study was partly
   conducted under the KP6 Newater, KvK program Theme 6 and has been partly
   funded by a Veni grant of the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific
   Research (NWO) and the EU FP7 project ENHANCE.
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NR 74
TC 9
Z9 12
U1 2
U2 26
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 1381-2386
EI 1573-1596
J9 MITIG ADAPT STRAT GL
JI Mitig. Adapt. Strateg. Glob. Chang.
PD DEC
PY 2015
VL 20
IS 8
BP 1247
EP 1265
DI 10.1007/s11027-014-9540-0
PG 19
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA CU0ZG
UT WOS:000363247700001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Haasnoot, M
   van Deursen, WPA
   Guillaume, JHA
   Kwakkel, JH
   van Beek, E
   Middelkoop, H
AF Haasnoot, M.
   van Deursen, W. P. A.
   Guillaume, J. H. A.
   Kwakkel, J. H.
   van Beek, E.
   Middelkoop, H.
TI Fit for purpose? Building and evaluating a fast, integrated model for
   exploring water policy pathways
SO ENVIRONMENTAL MODELLING & SOFTWARE
LA English
DT Article
DE Integrated assessment; Metamodel; Water management; Uncertainty; Climate
   change adaptation; Rhine
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; NETHERLANDS; ADAPTATION; STRATEGIES;
   MANAGEMENT; SYSTEM
AB Exploring adaptation pathways is an emerging approach for supporting decision making under uncertain changing conditions. An adaptation pathway is a sequence of policy actions to reach specified objectives. To develop adaptation pathways, interactions between environment and policy response need to be analysed over time for an ensemble of plausible futures. A fast, integrated model can facilitate this. Here, we describe the development and evaluation of such a model, an Integrated Assessment Metamodel (IAMM), to explore adaptation pathways in the Rhine delta for a decision problem currently faced by the Dutch Government. The theory-motivated metamodel is a simplified physically based model. Closed questions reflecting the required accuracy were used to evaluate the model's fitness. The results show that such a model fits the purpose of screening and ranking of policy options and pathways to support the strategic decision making. A complex model can subsequently be used to obtain more detailed information. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-SA license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/).
C1 [Haasnoot, M.; van Beek, E.] Deltares, NL-2600 MH Delft, Netherlands.
   [Haasnoot, M.; van Beek, E.] Univ Twente, Dept Water Engn & Management, NL-7500 AE Enschede, Netherlands.
   [Haasnoot, M.; Middelkoop, H.] Univ Utrecht, Dept Geosci, Utrecht, Netherlands.
   [van Deursen, W. P. A.] Carthago Consultancy, Rotterdam, Netherlands.
   [Guillaume, J. H. A.] Australian Natl Univ, Natl Ctr Groundwater Res & Training, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
   [Guillaume, J. H. A.] Australian Natl Univ, Fenner Sch Environm & Soc, iCAM, Canberra, ACT, Australia.
   [Kwakkel, J. H.] Delft Univ Technol, Fac Technol Policy & Management, Delft, Netherlands.
C3 Deltares; University of Twente; Utrecht University; National Centre for
   Groundwater Research & Training; Australian National University;
   Australian National University; Delft University of Technology
RP Haasnoot, M (corresponding author), Deltares, POB 177, NL-2600 MH Delft, Netherlands.
EM marjolijn.haasnoot@deltares.nl
RI Middelkoop, Hans/C-5249-2012; Guillaume, Joseph/I-6019-2014; Kwakkel,
   Jan/D-9680-2013; Haasnoot, Marjolijn/H-4827-2012
OI Guillaume, Joseph/0000-0001-6854-8708; Kwakkel, Jan/0000-0001-9447-2954;
   Middelkoop, Hans/0000-0002-9549-292X; Haasnoot,
   Marjolijn/0000-0002-9062-4698
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NR 71
TC 79
Z9 84
U1 0
U2 36
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1364-8152
EI 1873-6726
J9 ENVIRON MODELL SOFTW
JI Environ. Modell. Softw.
PD OCT
PY 2014
VL 60
BP 99
EP 120
DI 10.1016/j.envsoft.2014.05.020
PG 22
WC Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications; Engineering,
   Environmental; Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Computer Science; Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water
   Resources
GA AO3GX
UT WOS:000341218800008
OA Green Published, hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Ebi, KL
   Hallegatte, S
   Kram, T
   Arnell, NW
   Carter, TR
   Edmonds, J
   Kriegler, E
   Mathur, R
   O'Neill, BC
   Riahi, K
   Winkler, H
   Van Vuuren, DP
   Zwickel, T
AF Ebi, Kristie L.
   Hallegatte, Stephane
   Kram, Tom
   Arnell, Nigel W.
   Carter, Timothy R.
   Edmonds, Jae
   Kriegler, Elmar
   Mathur, Ritu
   O'Neill, Brian C.
   Riahi, Keywan
   Winkler, Harald
   Van Vuuren, Detlef P.
   Zwickel, Timm
TI A new scenario framework for climate change research: background,
   process, and future directions
SO CLIMATIC CHANGE
LA English
DT Article
AB The scientific community is developing new global, regional, and sectoral scenarios to facilitate interdisciplinary research and assessment to explore the range of possible future climates and related physical changes that could pose risks to human and natural systems; how these changes could interact with social, economic, and environmental development pathways; the degree to which mitigation and adaptation policies can avoid and reduce risks; the costs and benefits of various policy mixes; and the relationship of future climate change adaptation and mitigation policy responses with sustainable development. This paper provides the background to and process of developing the conceptual framework for these scenarios, as described in the three subsequent papers in this Special Issue (Van Vuuren et al., 2013; O'Neill et al., 2013; Kriegler et al., Submitted for publication in this special issue). The paper also discusses research needs to further develop, apply, and revise this framework in an iterative and open-ended process. A key goal of the framework design and its future development is to facilitate the collaboration of climate change researchers from a broad range of perspectives and disciplines to develop policy- and decision-relevant scenarios and explore the challenges and opportunities human and natural systems could face with additional climate change.
C1 [Ebi, Kristie L.] ClimAdapt LLC, Los Altos, CA 94022 USA.
   [Hallegatte, Stephane] World Bank, Washington, DC 20433 USA.
   [Kram, Tom; Van Vuuren, Detlef P.] Netherlands Environm Assessment Agcy PBL, Bilthoven, Netherlands.
   [Arnell, Nigel W.] Walker Inst Climate Syst Res, Reading, Berks, England.
   [Carter, Timothy R.] Finnish Environm Inst SYKE, Climate Change Programme, Helsinki, Finland.
   [Edmonds, Jae] Joint Global Change Res Inst, Baltimore, MD USA.
   [Kriegler, Elmar; Zwickel, Timm] Potsdam Inst Climate Impact Res, Potsdam, Germany.
   [Mathur, Ritu] TERI, New Delhi, India.
   [O'Neill, Brian C.] Natl Ctr Atmospher Res, Boulder, CO 80307 USA.
   [Riahi, Keywan] Int Inst Appl Syst Anal, A-2361 Laxenburg, Austria.
   [Winkler, Harald] Univ Cape Town, ZA-7925 Cape Town, South Africa.
   [Van Vuuren, Detlef P.] Univ Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands.
C3 The World Bank; University of Reading; Finnish Environment Institute;
   Potsdam Institut fur Klimafolgenforschung; National Center Atmospheric
   Research (NCAR) - USA; International Institute for Applied Systems
   Analysis (IIASA); University of Cape Town; Utrecht University
RP Ebi, KL (corresponding author), ClimAdapt LLC, 424 Tyndall St, Los Altos, CA 94022 USA.
EM krisebi@essllc.org
RI Arnell, Nigel/AAC-7331-2020; Hallegatte, Stephane/ADX-3450-2022;
   O'Neill, Brian/E-6531-2013; Ebi, Kristie/AFK-6769-2022; Winkler,
   Harald/AAF-6226-2020; Carter, Timothy/N-4411-2017; Mathur,
   Ritu/JPK-5922-2023; van Vuuren, Detlef/A-4764-2009; Riahi,
   Keywan/B-6426-2011; Kriegler, Elmar/I-3048-2016
OI Winkler, Harald/0000-0002-5826-4071; Arnell, Nigel/0000-0003-2691-4436;
   Carter, Timothy/0000-0002-4026-8859; van Vuuren,
   Detlef/0000-0003-0398-2831; Riahi, Keywan/0000-0001-7193-3498; Kriegler,
   Elmar/0000-0002-3307-2647
CR [Anonymous], 2008, NEW SCENARIOS ANAL E
   [Anonymous], ASP GLOB CHANG I 200
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   Kriegler E, CLIMATIC CHANGE
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NR 22
TC 145
Z9 163
U1 1
U2 85
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0165-0009
EI 1573-1480
J9 CLIMATIC CHANGE
JI Clim. Change
PD FEB
PY 2014
VL 122
IS 3
SI SI
BP 363
EP 372
DI 10.1007/s10584-013-0912-3
PG 10
WC Environmental Sciences; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA AA3JS
UT WOS:000330989300002
OA hybrid, Green Accepted, Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Thomas, CD
   Gillingham, PK
   Bradbury, RB
   Roy, DB
   Anderson, BJ
   Baxter, JM
   Bourn, NAD
   Crick, HQP
   Findon, RA
   Fox, R
   Hodgson, JA
   Holt, AR
   Morecroft, MD
   O'Hanlon, NJ
   Oliver, TH
   Pearce-Higgins, JW
   Procter, DA
   Thomas, JA
   Walker, KJ
   Walmsley, CA
   Wilson, RJ
   Hill, JK
AF Thomas, Chris D.
   Gillingham, Phillipa K.
   Bradbury, Richard B.
   Roy, David B.
   Anderson, Barbara J.
   Baxter, John M.
   Bourn, Nigel A. D.
   Crick, Humphrey Q. P.
   Findon, Richard A.
   Fox, Richard
   Hodgson, Jenny A.
   Holt, Alison R.
   Morecroft, Mike D.
   O'Hanlon, Nina J.
   Oliver, Tom H.
   Pearce-Higgins, James W.
   Procter, Deborah A.
   Thomas, Jeremy A.
   Walker, Kevin J.
   Walmsley, Clive A.
   Wilson, Robert J.
   Hill, Jane K.
TI Protected areas facilitate species' range expansions
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF
   AMERICA
LA English
DT Article
DE conservation; climate change adaptation; nature reserves
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; EXTINCTION RISK; IMPACTS; BRITAIN; DISTRIBUTIONS;
   RESERVES; NETWORK; EXTENT
AB The benefits of protected areas (PAs) for biodiversity have been questioned in the context of climate change because PAs are static, whereas the distributions of species are dynamic. Current PAs may, however, continue to be important if they provide suitable locations for species to colonize at their leading-edge range boundaries, thereby enabling spread into new regions. Here, we present an empirical assessment of the role of PAs as targets for colonization during recent range expansions. Records from intensive surveys revealed that seven bird and butterfly species have colonized PAs 4.2 (median) times more frequently than expected from the availability of PAs in the landscapes colonized. Records of an additional 256 invertebrate species with less-intensive surveys supported these findings and showed that 98% of species are disproportionately associated with PAs in newly colonized parts of their ranges. Although colonizing species favor PAs in general, species vary greatly in their reliance on PAs, reflecting differences in the dependence of individual species on particular habitats and other conditions that are available only in PAs. These findings highlight the importance of current PAs for facilitating range expansions and show that a small subset of the landscape receives a high proportion of colonizations by range-expanding species.
C1 [Thomas, Chris D.; Gillingham, Phillipa K.; Anderson, Barbara J.; Hodgson, Jenny A.; O'Hanlon, Nina J.; Hill, Jane K.] Univ York, Dept Biol, York YO10 5DD, N Yorkshire, England.
   [Bradbury, Richard B.] Royal Soc Protect Birds, Dept Conservat Sci, Sandy SG19 2DL, Beds, England.
   [Roy, David B.; Oliver, Tom H.] NERC, Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Wallingford OX10 8BB, Oxon, England.
   [Baxter, John M.] Policy & Advice Directorate, Scottish Nat Heritage, Edinburgh EH12 7AT, Midlothian, Scotland.
   [Crick, Humphrey Q. P.] Nat England, Cambridge CB2 8DR, England.
   [Findon, Richard A.] Dept Environm Food & Rural Affairs, London SW1P 3JR, England.
   [Holt, Alison R.] Univ Sheffield, Dept Anim & Plant Sci, Sheffield S10 2TN, S Yorkshire, England.
   [Morecroft, Mike D.] Nat England, Winchester SO23 7BT, Hants, England.
   [Procter, Deborah A.] Joint Nat Conservat Comm, Peterborough PE1 1JY, Cambs, England.
   [Thomas, Jeremy A.] Univ Oxford, Dept Zool, Oxford OX1 3PS, England.
   [Walmsley, Clive A.] Countryside Council Wales, Bangor LL57 2DW, Gwynedd, Wales.
   [Wilson, Robert J.] Univ Exeter, Ctr Ecol & Conservat, Penryn TR10 9EZ, England.
C3 University of York - UK; Royal Society for Protection of Birds; UK
   Research & Innovation (UKRI); Natural Environment Research Council
   (NERC); UK Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (UKCEH); University of
   Sheffield; University of Oxford; University of Exeter
RP Thomas, CD (corresponding author), Univ York, Dept Biol, York YO10 5DD, N Yorkshire, England.
EM chris.thomas@york.ac.uk
RI Hill, Jane/AAJ-3374-2021; Hodgson, Jenny/C-9997-2009; Oliver,
   Tom/K-2670-2012; Walker, Kevin/KGK-8288-2024; Morecroft,
   Mike/IQT-7880-2023; Fox, Richard/G-3873-2011; Thomas,
   Jeremy/A-9619-2013; Gillingham, Phillipa/F-7960-2012; O'Hanlon,
   Nina/N-9810-2014; Anderson, Barbara J/E-6802-2012; Wilson,
   Robert/I-8726-2014; Thomas, Chris/A-1894-2012; Roy, David/A-6619-2009
OI Gillingham, Phillipa/0000-0002-9499-7627; Oliver,
   Tom/0000-0002-4169-7313; Hodgson, Jenny/0000-0003-2297-3631; O'Hanlon,
   Nina/0000-0001-6396-4518; Crick, Humphrey/0000-0002-5136-378X; Bradbury,
   Richard/0000-0002-1245-2763; Fox, Richard/0000-0001-6992-3522; Anderson,
   Barbara J/0000-0003-1763-3616; Bourn, Nigel/0000-0003-1416-6047; Wilson,
   Robert/0000-0003-4477-7068; Thomas, Chris/0000-0003-2822-1334; Roy,
   David/0000-0002-5147-0331
FU Scottish Natural Heritage; Knowledge Exchange Grant from the Natural
   Environment Research Council; NERC [NE/I008578/1, NE/F018606/1] Funding
   Source: UKRI
FX We thank the many, mainly volunteer, recorders responsible for data
   collection. We also thank referees for suggestions to improve the
   manuscript. We thank The Aquatic Heteroptera Recording Scheme,
   Biological Records Centre, British Arachnological Society (Spider
   Recording Scheme), British Dragonfly Society (Dragonfly Recording
   Scheme), British Trust for Ornithology, Butterfly Conservation,
   Cantharoidea and Buprestoidea Recording Scheme, Cerambycidae Recording
   Scheme, Countryside Council for Wales, Forestry Commission, Ground
   Beetle Recording Scheme, Joint Nature Conservation Committee, Natural
   England, Natural Environment Research Council, Orthoptera Recording
   Scheme, Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, and Scottish Natural
   Heritage for data and/or financial support for surveys. The project was
   funded by a Knowledge Exchange Grant from the Natural Environment
   Research Council.
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NR 31
TC 186
Z9 202
U1 4
U2 195
PU NATL ACAD SCIENCES
PI WASHINGTON
PA 2101 CONSTITUTION AVE NW, WASHINGTON, DC 20418 USA
SN 0027-8424
J9 P NATL ACAD SCI USA
JI Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A.
PD AUG 28
PY 2012
VL 109
IS 35
BP 14063
EP 14068
DI 10.1073/pnas.1210251109
PG 6
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 002VP
UT WOS:000308565300043
PM 22893689
OA Green Published, Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Scott, D
   Lemieux, C
AF Scott, Daniel
   Lemieux, Christopher
TI Climate change and protected areas policy, planning and management in
   Canada's boreal forest
SO FORESTRY CHRONICLE
LA English
DT Article
DE protected areas; climate change; boreal forest; Canada; adaptation;
   impacts; policy; planning; management
ID GREAT-LAKES; SENSITIVITY; ECOSYSTEMS; PHENOLOGY; MODEL
AB For over a decade, the international scientific community and protected areas professionals have recognized that climate change will have critical implications for protected areas policy, planning and management. However, only a limited literature to date has focused on the implications of climate change for specific protected areas jurisdictions (i.e., national and/or provincial/territorial parks systems). This paper provides an overview of the potential impacts of climate change on Canada's system of boreal protected areas, highlighting the cross-jurisdictional policy, planning and management sensitivities in this biome. Results of a nation-wide climate change survey with protected area organizations are also presented, which reveal a strong incongruity between the perceived salience of climate change for protected area policy and management and a lack of available resources to provide capacity to deal with.the challenge of climate change adaptation. To safeguard against the limitations of traditional protected areas system planning, and to ensure. the persistence of boreal ecodiversity over the 21(st) century and beyond, we call for more rigorous and practical discussion. by Canadian protected areas agencies and organizations on the issue of climate change and for a collective and proactive management response.
C1 Univ Waterloo, Dept Geog, Canada Res Chair Global Change & Tourism, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
C3 University of Waterloo
RP Scott, D (corresponding author), Univ Waterloo, Dept Geog, Canada Res Chair Global Change & Tourism, ES 1,Room 207, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada.
EM dj2scott@fes.uwaterloo.ca; cjlemieu@fes.uwaterloo.ca
RI Scott, Daniel/AAB-6190-2020
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   Daniel/0000-0001-7825-9301
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NR 75
TC 14
Z9 18
U1 1
U2 34
PU CANADIAN INST FORESTRY
PI MATTAWA
PA C/O CANADIAN ECOLOGY CENTRE, PO BOX 430, 6905 HWY 17 W, MATTAWA, ONTARIO
   P0H 1V0, CANADA
SN 0015-7546
EI 1499-9315
J9 FOREST CHRON
JI For. Chron.
PD MAY-JUN
PY 2007
VL 83
IS 3
BP 347
EP 357
DI 10.5558/tfc83347-3
PG 11
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA 177JQ
UT WOS:000247149800023
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Dale, L
AF Dale, Lisa
BA Dale, L
BF Dale, L
TI URBAN PLANNING FOR CLIMATE ADAPTATION
SO CLIMATE CHANGE ADAPTATION: An Earth Institute Sustainability Primer
SE Columbia University Earth Institute Sustainability Primers
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
NR 0
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU COLUMBIA UNIV PRESS
PI NEW YORK
PA 61 WEST 62 ST, NEW YORK, NY 10023 USA
BN 978-0-231-19917-9; 978-0-231-55297-4; 978-0-231-19916-2
J9 Columbia Univ Earth
PY 2022
BP 70
EP 84
PG 15
WC Environmental Studies; Public Administration
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Public Administration
GA BV2CP
UT WOS:001003361300005
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Bertin, M
   Vincenti, E
AF Bertin, Mattia
   Vincenti, Eugenia
TI Eco-Zip: Climate-Proofing an International Logistic Hub
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; settlement scheme design; green
   infrastructure
ID URBAN-DESIGN; MITIGATION; RECOVERY; RISK
AB One of the most significant challenges in urban design today is the adaptation of industrial and logistical areas to climate change. These vast hubs are sites with a high degree of vulnerability concerning management of stormwater and heat waves. However, local planning struggles to develop appropriate tools for these essential structures. The lack of tools disregards climate influence on the future economy and the quality and safety of workplaces. Moreover, intervening in such large areas can increase green and blue systems. The research described in this article reflects on their possible evolution in a climate change mitigation and adaptation scenario from a global perspective, helping to achieve UN Sustainable Development Goals (8; 9; 11; 13; 15). The study intends to propose the redefinition of the settlement scheme as an adaptation tool. This strategy takes the Industrial Zone of Padova as a test site, and it is developed to reduce risks related to extreme climate events by favouring the action of green infrastructures and, at the same time, exploiting the social and economic opportunities that may emerge from this urban transformation.
C1 [Bertin, Mattia; Vincenti, Eugenia] Univ Iuav Venezia, EPiC Earth & Polis Res Ctr, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
C3 IUAV University Venice
RP Bertin, M (corresponding author), Univ Iuav Venezia, EPiC Earth & Polis Res Ctr, I-30123 Venice, Italy.
EM mbertin@iuav.it; evincenti@iuav.it
OI Vincenti, Eugenia/0009-0009-7776-562X
FU PNRR-Piano Nazionale di Ripresa e Resilienza
FX No Statement Available
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NR 62
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 4
U2 4
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD MAR
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 5
AR 2053
DI 10.3390/su16052053
PG 20
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA KW9H9
UT WOS:001183113100001
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cassin, L
   Melindi-Ghidi, P
   Prieur, F
AF Cassin, Lesly
   Melindi-Ghidi, Paolo
   Prieur, Fabien
TI Confronting climate change: Adaptation vs. migration in Small Island
   Developing States?
SO RESOURCE AND ENERGY ECONOMICS
LA English
DT Article
DE SIDS; Climate change; Adaptation; Migration; Natural capital; Optimal
   policy -mix
ID MITIGATION; WORLD
AB This paper examines the adaptation policy of Small Island Developing States (SIDS) facing climate change. We consider a dynamic economy with the following ingredients: (i) natural capital is an input in local production that is degraded as a result of climate change; (ii) the government has two instruments to cope with climate-related damages: it can adjust the population size thanks to migration policies and/or it can undertake adaptation measures in order to slow the degradation of natural assets; (iii) expatriates send remittances back home. We identify two critical conditions on the fundamentals of the economy that helps under-stand the features of the optimal policy. We especially show that in most situations, the migration policy is a valuable instrument. Calibrating the model for Caribbean SIDS, we find that the optimal policy of the Caribbean region displays heterogeneity, that is explained by the different degradation rate, population size, and endowment in natural capital. We also highlight that the higher the climate damages, the higher the incentives to conduct an active adaptation policy, combining conventional adaptation actions and migration. (c) 2022 Published by Elsevier B.V.
C1 [Cassin, Lesly] Univ Paris 01, Pantheon Sorbonne, Ctr Econ Sorbonne, CNRS, Paris, France.
   [Melindi-Ghidi, Paolo] Univ Paris Nanterre & AMSE, Aix Marseille Univ, EconomiX CNRS, UPL, Nanterre, France.
   [Prieur, Fabien] Univ Montpellier, CEE M, CNRS, INRAE,Montpellier SupAgro, Montpellier, France.
C3 heSam Universite; Universite Pantheon-Sorbonne; Centre National de la
   Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Aix-Marseille Universite; Centre National
   de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); INRAE; Institut Agro; Montpellier
   SupAgro; Universite de Montpellier
RP Prieur, F (corresponding author), Univ Montpellier, CEE M, CNRS, INRAE,Montpellier SupAgro, Montpellier, France.
EM lesly.cassin@univ-paris1.fr; paolo.melindighidi@parisnanterre.fr;
   fabien.prieur@umontpellier.fr
RI PRIEUR, Fabien/AAT-9498-2020; Cassin, Lesly/HJP-5107-2023
OI Cassin, Lesly/0000-0001-6869-0149
FU ANR GREEN-Econ research project [ANR-16-CE03-00 05, ANR-15-IDEX-02]
FX We would like to thank M. Beine, M. Davin, P. Peretto, A.
   Perez-Barahona, I. Schumacher, T. Seegmuller, B. Zou, and participants
   in seminars and conferences in Luxembourg, Marseille, OFCE Paris,
   Rennes, Saint Petersburg, and Strasbourg. We also thank three anonymous
   referees, and the Editor-in-chief, S. Ambec, for their valuable comments
   that help improve the paper. F. Prieur acknowledges that this work was
   supported by the ANR GREEN-Econ research project (ANR-16-CE03-00 05) .
   P. Melindi-Ghidi acknowledges partial support by ANR-15-IDEX-02.
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NR 32
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 3
U2 19
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0928-7655
EI 1873-0221
J9 RESOUR ENERGY ECON
JI Resour. Energy Econ.
PD AUG
PY 2022
VL 69
AR 101301
DI 10.1016/j.reseneeco.2022.101301
EA JUL 2022
PG 23
WC Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics; Energy & Fuels; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 3E9NJ
UT WOS:000830303000007
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Raza, K
   Wang, GX
   Naqvi, SAA
   ul Hassan, RH
AF Raza, Kashif
   Wang, Guixia
   Naqvi, Syed Asif Ali
   ul Hassan, Rai Hasis
TI Efficacy of feed improvement in livestock farming to offset climate
   variations in Punjab, Pakistan: silage as an example
SO ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Livestock; Silage; Household; Income; Food security
ID CHANGE ADAPTATION; FOOD SECURITY; FARMERS ADAPTATION; CROP PRODUCTIVITY;
   STRATEGIES; IMPACTS; VULNERABILITY; ADOPTION; RISK; TECHNOLOGY
AB Globally, climate change is an alarming threat to the livestock industry. Such changes in the climate can also adversely affect the returns of livestock farmers in Pakistan. Improvement in the production process could decrease the risk of losses. This study analyzes the efficacy of silage to abate the losses in livestock profitability resulting from the climate change. The study employed cross-sectional survey data of 492 livestock farmers collected from six districts of Punjab Province, Pakistan. The data are analyzed with endogenous switching regression, considering the possibility of selection bias and endogeneity in adopting silage as a climate change adaptation measure. The study findings show a significant difference in material well-being between silage users and conventional feed users. Furthermore, training programs such as silage training and livestock development programs could be meaningful provisions to abate climate change and improve food security. It is suggested that training and development programs should be incorporated in policy plans to improve the well-being of farmers in terms of their farm revenues.
C1 [Raza, Kashif; Wang, Guixia] Jilin Agr Univ, Coll Econ & Management, Changchun 130118, Peoples R China.
   [Naqvi, Syed Asif Ali; ul Hassan, Rai Hasis] Govt Coll Univ Faisalabad, Dept Econ, Faisalabad 38040, Pakistan.
C3 Jilin Agricultural University; Government College University Faisalabad
RP Wang, GX (corresponding author), Jilin Agr Univ, Coll Econ & Management, Changchun 130118, Peoples R China.
EM guixia-w@163.com
RI Naqvi, Syed Asif Ali/AAL-9591-2020
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NR 87
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 8
PU SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
PI HEIDELBERG
PA TIERGARTENSTRASSE 17, D-69121 HEIDELBERG, GERMANY
SN 0944-1344
EI 1614-7499
J9 ENVIRON SCI POLLUT R
JI Environ. Sci. Pollut. Res.
PD JUL
PY 2021
VL 28
IS 28
BP 37279
EP 37291
DI 10.1007/s11356-021-13181-5
EA MAR 2021
PG 13
WC Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA TQ3XY
UT WOS:000628110900008
PM 33712961
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Carr, ER
AF Carr, Edward R.
TI Resilient livelihoods in an era of global transformation
SO GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE-HUMAN AND POLICY DIMENSIONS
LA English
DT Article
DE Livelihoods; Resilience; Adaptation; Development; Socio-ecology
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE; CHANGING CLIMATE; SMALLHOLDER; LAND; VULNERABILITY;
   ADAPTATION; LESSONS; SYSTEMS; SUBSISTENCE; HOUSEHOLDS
AB Much as development's understanding of livelihoods became intertwined with notions of sustainability in the late 1990s, today livelihoods analysis is taking up the rise of resilience in the development and climate change adaptation communities of practice. The emergent concept of resilient livelihoods risks perpetuating problematic framings of both socio-ecological and livelihoods dynamics that limit the effectiveness of development and adaptation interventions. In this paper, I connect recent contributions to the livelihoods and socio-ecological resilience literatures to define resilient livelihoods as projects aimed at the achievement of well-being in a manner that preserves existing systems of meaning, order, and privilege. These projects (re)produce socio-ecologies, deeply human assemblages of socio-cultural and biotic elements. So framed, the idea of resilient livelihoods centers meaning, power, difference, and agency in both livelihoods and socio-ecological dynamics. It opens up new understandings of the character, sources, and importance of resilience in livelihoods, allows for the identification of new indicators of livelihoods fragility, points to previously-overlooked sources of potential livelihoods transformation and change, and suggests sites of productive engagement between development and adaptation interventions and transformation and change.
C1 [Carr, Edward R.] Clark Univ, Int Dev Community & Environm Dept IDCE, 950 Main St, Worcester, MA 01610 USA.
   [Carr, Edward R.] Clark Univ, George Perkins Marsh Inst, Humanitarian Response & Dev Lab HURDL, 950 Main St, Worcester, MA 01610 USA.
C3 Clark University; Clark University
RP Carr, ER (corresponding author), Clark Univ, Int Dev Community & Environm Dept IDCE, 950 Main St, Worcester, MA 01610 USA.; Carr, ER (corresponding author), Clark Univ, George Perkins Marsh Inst, Humanitarian Response & Dev Lab HURDL, 950 Main St, Worcester, MA 01610 USA.
EM edcarr@clarku.edu
RI Carr, Edward/A-7206-2009
OI Carr, Edward/0000-0001-7784-471X
FU ESRC [ES/S007687/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-3780
EI 1872-9495
J9 GLOBAL ENVIRON CHANG
JI Glob. Environ. Change-Human Policy Dimens.
PD SEP
PY 2020
VL 64
AR 102155
DI 10.1016/j.gloenvcha.2020.102155
PG 8
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Geography
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Geography
GA OA2NP
UT WOS:000577629200014
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kadanali, E
   Yalcinkaya, O
AF KADANALI, Esra
   Yalcinkaya, Omer
TI EFFECTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE ON ECONOMIC GROWTH: EVIDENCE FROM 20 BIGGEST
   ECONOMIES OF THE WORLD
SO ROMANIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC FORECASTING
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; economic growth; panel data analysis; cross-sectional
   dependence; Cobb-Douglas production function; the Top 20 economies in
   the world
ID UNIT-ROOT TESTS; CROSS-SECTION; AFRICAN COUNTRIES; IMPACT; TEMPERATURE;
   WEATHER
AB This study empirically examines the symmetric and asymmetric effects of climate change measured by temperature and precipitation variables and six other indicators on economic growth in the top 20 economies in the world (WTE-20-in terms of nominal Gross Domestic Product), over the period from 1990 to 2016. Based on the extension of the Cobb-Douglas production function (CDPF), the study uses linear and nonlinear procedures within the scope of new-generation panel data analysis that takes into account the cross-sectional dependence. Regardless of which approaches are used to explain the climate regime, the evidence from this study indicates that climate change has negative and statistically significant effects on economic growth. Therefore, along with the development of climate change adaptation policies, the collaboration under the leadership of the WTE-20 countries to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and thereby prevent the temperature increases should be improved to minimize the negative effects of climate change on growth performances in these countries.
C1 [KADANALI, Esra] Ibrahim Cecen Univ Agri, Fac Econ & Adm Sci, Dept Business, Agri, Turkey.
   [Yalcinkaya, Omer] Ataturk Univ Erzurum, Fac Econ & Adm Sci, Erzurum, Turkey.
C3 Agri Ibrahim Cecen University; Ataturk University
RP Kadanali, E (corresponding author), Ibrahim Cecen Univ Agri, Fac Econ & Adm Sci, Dept Business, Agri, Turkey.
EM ekadanali@agri.edu.tr; oyalcinkaya@atauni.edu.tr
RI KAADANALI, ESRA/F-7700-2018; YALÇINKAYA, Ömer/AAA-1478-2022
CR Abidoye BO, 2015, J AFR ECON, V24, P277, DOI 10.1093/jae/eju033
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NR 62
TC 5
Z9 5
U1 2
U2 11
PU INST ECONOMIC FORECASTING
PI BUCHAREST
PA CASA ACADEMIEI, CALEA 13 SEPTEMBRIE NR 13, SECTOR 5, BUCHAREST, 050711,
   ROMANIA
SN 1582-6163
EI 2537-6071
J9 ROM J ECON FORECAST
JI Rom. J. Econ. Forecast
PY 2020
VL 23
IS 3
BP 93
EP 118
PG 26
WC Economics
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Business & Economics
GA OA0YH
UT WOS:000577521800006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Wanner, MST
AF Wanner, Maximilian S. T.
TI Drivers of Change in National Disaster Governance under the Hyogo
   Framework for Action
SO POLITICS AND GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article
DE accountability mechanisms; climate change adaptation; disaster
   governance; disaster risk reduction; Hyogo Framework for Action; policy
   change; punctuated equilibrium
ID POLICY TRANSFER; MITIGATION; CRISIS; DIFFUSION
AB Many suggestions have been made on what motivates countries to expand their measures for disaster risk reduction (DRR), including the frequency and severity of natural hazards, accountability mechanisms, and governance capacity. Despite the fact that theoretical arguments have been developed and evidence collected from small-scale case studies, few studies have attempted to explain the substantial variation in the adoption of DRR measures across countries. This study combines available data on DRR measures, natural hazard events, governance, and socioeconomic characteristics to provide a systematic assessment of the changes that have occurred in the state of DRR at the national level. In line with theoretical explanations, there are indeed associations between several measures of frequency and severity and the development of DRR status. Additionally, voice and accountability mechanisms, as well as development aid, might facilitate positive change. Although these first results of a global comparative study on change in DRR have to be taken cautiously, it is a step forward to understanding the drivers of change at the national level.
C1 [Wanner, Maximilian S. T.] Uppsala Univ, Dept Govt, S-75120 Uppsala, Sweden.
   [Wanner, Maximilian S. T.] Uppsala Univ, Ctr Nat Hazards & Disaster Sci, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden.
C3 Uppsala University; Centre of Natural Hazards & Disaster Science (CNDS);
   Uppsala University
RP Wanner, MST (corresponding author), Uppsala Univ, Dept Govt, S-75120 Uppsala, Sweden.; Wanner, MST (corresponding author), Uppsala Univ, Ctr Nat Hazards & Disaster Sci, S-75236 Uppsala, Sweden.
EM maximilian.wanner@statsvet.uu.se
RI Wanner, Maximilian/AIE-4785-2022
OI Wanner, Maximilian S.T./0000-0003-4299-283X
FU Centre of Natural Hazards and Disaster Science (CNDS)
FX The author thanks the editors and anonymous referees for their detailed
   and constructive comments. Furthermore, he is grateful to Karl-Oskar
   Lindgren for insightful feedback on an earlier version of the article.
   Thanks go also to the supervisors Daniel Nohrstedt and Charles Parker
   for their constructive feedback and thoughts during the process. This
   research was supported by the Centre of Natural Hazards and Disaster
   Science (CNDS).
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NR 52
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 0
U2 11
PU COGITATIO PRESS
PI LISBON
PA RUA FIALHO ALMEIDA 14, 2 ESQ, LISBON, 1070-129, PORTUGAL
SN 2183-2463
J9 POLITICS GOV
JI Politics Gov.
PY 2020
VL 8
IS 4
BP 256
EP 269
DI 10.17645/pag.v8i4.3062
PG 14
WC Political Science
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Government & Law
GA PP2BH
UT WOS:000605672100005
OA Green Published, gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Olazabal, M
   Pascual, U
AF Olazabal, Marta
   Pascual, Unai
TI Urban low-carbon transitions: cognitive barriers and opportunities
SO JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Sustainable urban transformation; Cognitive dimension; Low-carbon
   transitions; Q methodology
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; Q METHODOLOGY; GHG EMISSIONS; CITIES; ENERGY;
   SUSTAINABILITY; GOVERNANCE; POLICY; ORGANIZATION; INFORMATION
AB This paper addresses the importance of the cognitive dimension in urban sustainability transition policy practice. Many and diverse actors with contrasting interests interact in urban sustainability transitions. Their perceptions and values impact the potential uptake of transition strategies in urban systems. It is thus important to understand how actors view themselves involved in such processes. A case study on low carbon transitions for the city of Bilbao (Basque Country) is presented to explore the barriers and opportunities for an energy transition using Q methodology. Results suggest that stakeholders' motivation and perceived capacity for change are mainly related to four main discourses: follower, visionary, pragmatist and sceptic. Results also indicate that information exchange, communication and participation in decision-making processes, bridging visionaries and pragmatists with decision-makers, are key for bringing about effective transition processes. This study contributes to identifying attitudes of actors who can negotiate urban low-carbon transitions and stresses the need to build a common shared cognitive vision of whether and how sustainable urban transformation can take place. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Olazabal, Marta; Pascual, Unai] Univ Cambridge, Dept Land Econ, Cambridge CB3 9EP, England.
   [Olazabal, Marta; Pascual, Unai] Basque Ctr Climate Change, Bilbao 48008, Spain.
   [Pascual, Unai] Basque Fdn Sci, Ikerbasque, Bilbao 48013, Spain.
C3 University of Cambridge; Basque Centre for Climate Change (BC3); Basque
   Foundation for Science
RP Olazabal, M (corresponding author), Basque Ctr Climate Change, BC3,Alameda Urquijo 4, Bilbao 48008, Spain.
EM marta.olazabal@bc3research.org
RI Olazabal, Marta/AFT-6957-2022; Pascual, Unai/O-7946-2019; Olazabal,
   Marta/C-3027-2008; PASCUAL, UNAI/B-4766-2012
OI Olazabal, Marta/0000-0002-3381-0654; PASCUAL, UNAI/0000-0002-5696-236X
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NR 71
TC 36
Z9 37
U1 2
U2 58
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0959-6526
EI 1879-1786
J9 J CLEAN PROD
JI J. Clean Prod.
PD DEC 16
PY 2015
VL 109
SI SI
BP 336
EP 346
DI 10.1016/j.jclepro.2015.08.047
PG 11
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Engineering, Environmental;
   Environmental Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Engineering; Environmental Sciences
   & Ecology
GA CZ9HZ
UT WOS:000367410000029
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kim, S
   Kwak, J
   Noh, HS
   Kim, HS
AF Kim, Soojun
   Kwak, Jaewon
   Noh, Hui Seong
   Kim, Hung Soo
TI Evaluation of drought and flood risks in a multipurpose dam under
   climate change: a case study of Chungju Dam in Korea
SO NATURAL HAZARDS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Drought; Flood; Water balance; Reservoir operation
   method
ID WATER-RESOURCES; IMPACT; BASIN; MODEL; RUNOFF
AB The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of climate change on the drought and flood risks of a multipurpose dam. To achieve this, A2 climate change scenarios of RegCM3 were collected about Chungju Dam in Korea. To analyze drought risks, weather data obtained by the statistical downscaling method were entered to produce runoff series by runoff modeling and water balance was analyzed based on water use scenarios to review changes in the storage volume under climate change. To analyze flood risks, changes in water levels of the dam in future flood seasons were reviewed based on the current dam operation method. The results of the review indicated that both the drought and the flood risks of the dam would increase in the future. The reason was considered to be the movement of the flood season's runoff characteristics from July and August to August and September because of climate change. Therefore, for climate change adaptation planning, not only quantitative changes in hydrologic values but also changes in temporal characteristics should be considered and given importance.
C1 [Kim, Soojun] Columbia Univ, Earth Inst, Columbia Water Ctr, Upper Manhattan, NY USA.
   [Kwak, Jaewon; Noh, Hui Seong; Kim, Hung Soo] Inha Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Inchon 402751, South Korea.
C3 Inha University
RP Kim, HS (corresponding author), Inha Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Inchon 402751, South Korea.
EM soojun78@gmail.com; firstsword@naver.com; heesung@hanmail.net;
   sookim@inha.ac.kr
FU National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF); Korean government (MEST)
   [2011-0028564]
FX This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea
   (NRF) and grant funded by the Korean government (MEST; No.
   2011-0028564).
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NR 43
TC 7
Z9 7
U1 0
U2 49
PU SPRINGER
PI NEW YORK
PA 233 SPRING ST, NEW YORK, NY 10013 USA
SN 0921-030X
EI 1573-0840
J9 NAT HAZARDS
JI Nat. Hazards
PD SEP
PY 2014
VL 73
IS 3
BP 1663
EP 1678
DI 10.1007/s11069-014-1164-x
PG 16
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA AN3MQ
UT WOS:000340492700028
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kabubo-Mariara, J
AF Kabubo-Mariara, Jane
TI Climate change adaptation and livestock activity choices in Kenya: An
   economic analysis
SO NATURAL RESOURCES FORUM
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; livestock management adaptation; Kenya
ID KAJIADO DISTRICT; RICARDIAN APPROACH; PROPERTY-RIGHTS; RISK; DROUGHT;
   HERDERS; PASTORALISTS; AGRICULTURE; FARMERS; COMMONS
AB This paper examines the impact of climate change on the decision of farmers to engage or not to engage in livestock activities and also on the choice of different livestock species in Kenya. To this end, cross-sectional household level data supplemented by long-term averages of climate data are used. The probit model is employed to derive the response of the probability of engaging in livestock activities to climate change. Probit and multivariate probit methods are employed to model the choice of different livestock species. Atmosphere-ocean global circulation models are used to project the impact of different climate scenarios on the probability of engaging in livestock activities and also of adopting different livestock species according to variations in climate. The results suggest that farmers adapt livestock management decisions to climate change. At low levels of temperature increase, the probability of engaging in livestock activities falls, but at higher levels of climate change, the probability rises. The results further show that as it gets hotter, farmers change their livestock choices from dairy cattle and sheep to beef cattle and goats.
C1 Univ Nairobi, Sch Econ, Nairobi, Kenya.
C3 University of Nairobi
RP Kabubo-Mariara, J (corresponding author), Univ Nairobi, Sch Econ, Nairobi, Kenya.
EM Jmariara@mail.uonbi.ac.ke
OI Kabubo-Mariara, Jane/0000-0001-7351-3024
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NR 31
TC 43
Z9 47
U1 1
U2 32
PU WILEY
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 0165-0203
EI 1477-8947
J9 NAT RESOUR FORUM
JI Nat. Resour. Forum
PD MAY
PY 2008
VL 32
IS 2
BP 131
EP 141
DI 10.1111/j.1477-8947.2008.00178.x
PG 11
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA 295SA
UT WOS:000255493000006
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Cooke, SJ
   Fulton, EA
   Sauer, WHH
   Lynch, AJ
   Link, JS
   Koning, AA
   Jena, J
   Silva, LGM
   King, AJ
   Kelly, R
   Osborne, M
   Nakamura, J
   Preece, AL
   Hagiwara, A
   Forsberg, K
   Kellner, JB
   Coscia, I
   Helyar, S
   Barange, M
   Nyboer, E
   Williams, MJ
   Chuenpagdee, R
   Begg, GA
   Gillanders, BM
AF Cooke, Steven J.
   Fulton, Elizabeth A.
   Sauer, Warwick H. H.
   Lynch, Abigail J.
   Link, Jason S.
   Koning, Aaron A.
   Jena, Joykrushna
   Silva, Luiz G. M.
   King, Alison J.
   Kelly, Rachel
   Osborne, Matthew
   Nakamura, Julia
   Preece, Ann L.
   Hagiwara, Atsushi
   Forsberg, Kerstin
   Kellner, Julie B.
   Coscia, Ilaria
   Helyar, Sarah
   Barange, Manuel
   Nyboer, Elizabeth
   Williams, Meryl J.
   Chuenpagdee, Ratana
   Begg, Gavin A.
   Gillanders, Bronwyn M.
TI Towards vibrant fish populations and sustainable fisheries that benefit
   all: learning from the last 30 years to inform the next 30 years
SO REVIEWS IN FISH BIOLOGY AND FISHERIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Fisheries; Marine; Freshwater; Food; Threats; Management; Assessment
ID SMALL-SCALE FISHERIES; FRESH-WATER BIODIVERSITY; INLAND FISHERIES; STOCK
   ASSESSMENT; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ENVIRONMENTAL DNA; MARINE RESOURCES; CITIZEN
   SCIENCE; SOCIAL-SCIENCE; MANAGEMENT
AB A common goal among fisheries science professionals, stakeholders, and rights holders is to ensure the persistence and resilience of vibrant fish populations and sustainable, equitable fisheries in diverse aquatic ecosystems, from small headwater streams to offshore pelagic waters. Achieving this goal requires a complex intersection of science and management, and a recognition of the interconnections among people, place, and fish that govern these tightly coupled socioecological and sociotechnical systems. The World Fisheries Congress (WFC) convenes every four years and provides a unique global forum to debate and discuss threats, issues, and opportunities facing fish populations and fisheries. The 2021 WFC meeting, hosted remotely in Adelaide, Australia, marked the 30th year since the first meeting was held in Athens, Greece, and provided an opportunity to reflect on progress made in the past 30 years and provide guidance for the future. We assembled a diverse team of individuals involved with the Adelaide WFC and reflected on the major challenges that faced fish and fisheries over the past 30 years, discussed progress toward overcoming those challenges, and then used themes that emerged during the Congress to identify issues and opportunities to improve sustainability in the world's fisheries for the next 30 years. Key future needs and opportunities identified include: rethinking fisheries management systems and modelling approaches, modernizing and integrating assessment and information systems, being responsive and flexible in addressing persistent and emerging threats to fish and fisheries, mainstreaming the human dimension of fisheries, rethinking governance, policy and compliance, and achieving equity and inclusion in fisheries. We also identified a number of cross-cutting themes including better understanding the role of fish as nutrition in a hungry world, adapting to climate change, embracing transdisciplinarity, respecting Indigenous knowledge systems, thinking ahead with foresight science, and working together across scales. By reflecting on the past and thinking about the future, we aim to provide guidance for achieving our mutual goal of sustaining vibrant fish populations and sustainable fisheries that benefit all. We hope that this prospective thinking can serve as a guide to (i) assess progress towards achieving this lofty goal and (ii) refine our path with input from new and emerging voices and approaches in fisheries science, management, and stewardship.
C1 [Cooke, Steven J.; Nyboer, Elizabeth] Carleton Univ, Dept Biol, Fish Ecol & Conservat Physiol Lab, 1125 Colonel Dr, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada.
   [Cooke, Steven J.; Nyboer, Elizabeth] Carleton Univ, Inst Environm & Interdisciplinary Sci, 1125 Colonel Dr, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada.
   [Fulton, Elizabeth A.; Preece, Ann L.] CSIRO Environm, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia.
   [Fulton, Elizabeth A.; Kelly, Rachel] Univ Tasmania, Ctr Marine Socioecol, Hobart, Tas 7001, Australia.
   [Sauer, Warwick H. H.] Rhodes Univ, Dept Ichthyol & Fisheries Sci, Grahamstown, South Africa.
   [Lynch, Abigail J.] US Geol Survey, Natl Climate Adaptat Sci Ctr, 12201 Sunrise Valley Dr, Reston, VA 20192 USA.
   [Link, Jason S.] NOAA, Natl Marine Fisheries Serv, Woods Hole, MA USA.
   [Koning, Aaron A.] Univ Nevada, Global Water Ctr, Reno, NV USA.
   [Jena, Joykrushna] Indian Council Agr Res, Krishi Anusandhan Bhawan 2, New Delhi 110012, India.
   [Silva, Luiz G. M.] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Inst Environm Engn, Zurich, Switzerland.
   [King, Alison J.] La Trobe Univ, Ctr Freshwater Ecosyst, Wodonga, Vic 3690, Australia.
   [Osborne, Matthew] Northern Terr Govt, Dept Ind Tourism & Trade, Darwin, NT 0800, Australia.
   [Nakamura, Julia] Univ Strathclyde, Strathclyde Ctr Environm Law & Governance, Law Sch, Glasgow, Scotland.
   [Hagiwara, Atsushi] Nagasaki Univ, Grad Sch Fisheries & Environm Sci, Nagasaki 8528521, Japan.
   [Forsberg, Kerstin] Planeta Oceano, Lima, Peru.
   [Forsberg, Kerstin] Migramar, Olema, CA USA.
   [Kellner, Julie B.] Woods Hole Oceanog Inst, Falmouth, MA 02453 USA.
   [Kellner, Julie B.] Int Council Explorat Sea, DK-1553 Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [Coscia, Ilaria] Univ Salford, Sch Sci Engn & Environm, Salford M5 4WT, England.
   [Helyar, Sarah] Queens Univ Belfast, Inst Global Food Secur, Sch Biol Sci, Belfast, Antrim, North Ireland.
   [Barange, Manuel] Food & Agr Org United Nations, Fisheries & Aquaculture Div, Viale Terme Caracalla S-N, I-00153 Rome, Italy.
   [Chuenpagdee, Ratana] Mem Univ Newfoundland, Dept Geog, St John, NF, Canada.
   [Begg, Gavin A.] Dept Primary Ind & Reg, POB 120, Henley Beach, SA 5022, Australia.
   [Gillanders, Bronwyn M.] Univ Adelaide, Sch Biol Sci, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
C3 Carleton University; Carleton University; Commonwealth Scientific &
   Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO); University of Tasmania; Rhodes
   University; United States Department of the Interior; United States
   Geological Survey; National Oceanic Atmospheric Admin (NOAA) - USA;
   Nevada System of Higher Education (NSHE); University of Nevada Reno;
   Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR); Swiss Federal Institutes
   of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; La Trobe University; Northern
   Territory Government; University of Strathclyde; Nagasaki University;
   Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution; University of Salford; Queens
   University Belfast; Food & Agriculture Organization of the United
   Nations (FAO); Memorial University Newfoundland; University of Adelaide
RP Cooke, SJ (corresponding author), Carleton Univ, Dept Biol, Fish Ecol & Conservat Physiol Lab, 1125 Colonel Dr, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada.; Cooke, SJ (corresponding author), Carleton Univ, Inst Environm & Interdisciplinary Sci, 1125 Colonel Dr, Ottawa, ON K1S 5B6, Canada.
EM steven.cooke@carleton.ca
RI Fulton, Beth/AAJ-1398-2021; Preece, Ann/E-9439-2015; Lynch,
   Abigail/H-5059-2019; Cooke, Steven/F-4193-2010; Kelly,
   Rachel/U-8836-2019; Silva, Luiz/O-9841-2016; Nyboer,
   Elizabeth/N-1055-2017; Osborne, Matthew/LRC-9559-2024; Sauer,
   Warwick/GJI-2267-2022; Link, Jason/HOF-3606-2023; Helyar,
   Sarah/C-4988-2013
OI Lynch, Abigail J./0000-0001-8449-8392; Sauer,
   Warwick/0000-0002-9756-1757; Kelly, Rachel/0000-0002-8364-1836;
   Williams, Meryl/0000-0001-5656-951X; Link, Jason/0000-0003-2740-7161;
   Nakamura, Julia/0000-0002-2558-1732; Cooke, Steven/0000-0002-5407-0659;
   Helyar, Sarah/0000-0002-1600-997X
FU GRCF; NERC [NE/S008950/1] Funding Source: UKRI
FX We thank Jessica Desforges for formatting the references and several
   anonymous referees for providing thoughtful comments. WS was supported
   by the GRCF funded project One Ocean Hub. We thank the World Fisheries
   Congress community for creating a space for discussing fish and
   fisheries. Authors from all organizations, excepting the U.S. Geological
   Survey, acknowledge the conference upon which this work is based was
   hosted in Australia in the city of Adelaide which is the traditional
   Country of the Kaurna people of the Adelaide Plains. And, we are all
   grateful to the Indigenous peoples for sharing their lands, waters and
   knowledges with us. Any use of trade, firm, or product names is for
   descriptive purposes only and does not imply endorsement by the U.S.
   Government.
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NR 272
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 34
PU SPRINGER
PI DORDRECHT
PA VAN GODEWIJCKSTRAAT 30, 3311 GZ DORDRECHT, NETHERLANDS
SN 0960-3166
EI 1573-5184
J9 REV FISH BIOL FISHER
JI Rev. Fish. Biol. Fish.
PD JUN
PY 2023
VL 33
IS 2
SI SI
BP 317
EP 347
DI 10.1007/s11160-023-09765-8
EA MAR 2023
PG 31
WC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Fisheries; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA G9QB4
UT WOS:000943576800001
PM 37122954
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rawat, V
   Rawat, S
   Srivastava, P
   Negi, PS
   Prakasam, M
   Kotlia, BS
AF Rawat, Varsha
   Rawat, Suman
   Srivastava, Priyeshu
   Negi, P. S.
   Prakasam, Muthusamy
   Kotlia, Bahadur Singh
TI Middle Holocene Indian summer monsoon variability and its impact on
   cultural changes in the Indian subcontinent
SO QUATERNARY SCIENCE REVIEWS
LA English
DT Article
DE Middle Holocene; Indian summer monsoon; Cultural changes; Himalaya;
   Multi-proxy
ID MAAR-LAKE-SEDIMENTS; CLIMATE-CHANGE; PRECIPITATION VARIABILITY;
   ENVIRONMENTAL-CHANGES; MAGNETIC-PROPERTIES; ASIAN MONSOON; INDUS VALLEY;
   YR BP; RECORD; HIMALAYA
AB Agriculture is a major contributor to the economic development of modern as well as ancient India and largely depends on the rainfall in the monsoon season. In order to understand the impact of climate variability on cultural changes in the Indian subcontinent, high resolution centennial to millennial scale middle Holocene Indian summer monsoon (ISM) variability was reconstructed from Bednikund lake, located in an alpine meadow of the Pindar basin, Chamoli, Central Himalaya. Increased ISM precipitations were found during similar to 5930-3950 (mid-Holocene climate optimum), similar to 3380-2830 (Minoan Warm Period), similar to 2610-1860 (Roman Warm Period), similar to 1050-760 (Medieval Climate Anomaly), and similar to 320 cal yr BP to Present (Current Warm Period). The decreased ISM strengths were found during similar to 3950-3380, similar to 2830 -2610, similar to 1860-1050 (Dark Ages Cold Period), similar to 760-580, and similar to 500-320 cal yr BP (Little Ice Age). The covariance between our records of precipitation change and total solar irradiance for the middle to late Holocene and with Northern hemisphere (NH) temperature for the past two millennia suggested solar insolation as a primary forcing mechanism of ISM variability. The reconstructed paleoclimate combined with archaeology and historical records indicated that ancient Indian civilizations e.g., the Indus Valley (similar to 5200-3300 cal yr BP) and Vedic (similar to 3400-2400 cal yr BP) had established and thrived during periods of strengthened ISM precipitation, whereas their collapse closely corresponded to the decreased strength in ISM. From similar to 2400 to 200 cal yr BP, the Indian subcontinent witnessed the rise and fall of various Kingdoms/dynasties. This period saw an exponential expansion/growth in agriculture, economy, population, languages, architecture, and religions in the Indian subcontinent. The agrarian-based economy showed little or no impact of monsoon weakening after similar to 2400 cal yr BP possibly due to development and reforms in administrative policies, construction of irrigation systems such as dams, lakes and canals, use of technology for irrigation such as waterwheel, knowledge of double cropping, production of cash crops. The ancient civilizations of India were directly impacted by the strengthening and weakening of ISM, whereas for the later periods, civilizations were able to adapt to climate change. (C) 2021 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
C1 [Rawat, Varsha; Rawat, Suman; Negi, P. S.; Prakasam, Muthusamy] Wadia Inst Himalayan Geol, 33 GMS Rd, Dehra Dun 248001, Uttarakhand, India.
   [Srivastava, Priyeshu] Univ Sao Paulo, Inst Oceanog, 191 Praca Oceanog, BR-05508120 Sao Paulo, Brazil.
   [Kotlia, Bahadur Singh] Kumaun Univ, Dept Geol, Naini Tal 263001, India.
C3 Department of Science & Technology (India); Wadia Institute of Himalayan
   Geology (WIHG); Universidade de Sao Paulo; Kumaun University
RP Rawat, S (corresponding author), Wadia Inst Himalayan Geol, 33 GMS Rd, Dehra Dun 248001, Uttarakhand, India.
EM rsuman26@gmail.com
RI Muthusamy, PRAKASAM/AAU-3303-2021; Srivastava, Priyeshu/F-2002-2015
OI Pandey, Alok Kumar/0000-0001-5604-3243; Srivastava,
   Priyeshu/0000-0001-7672-1929; Rawat, Suman/0000-0003-2944-5284;
   Muthusamy, PRAKASAM/0000-0002-2911-5229
FU Wadia Fellowship grant [8/51/2017/-JRF/WIHG/Estt]; FAPESP
   [2019/11364-0]; DST, India [ECR/2017/001046]
FX VR acknowledges Wadia Fellowship grant (8/51/2017/-JRF/WIHG/Estt) for
   financial support. PS acknowledges funding from FAPESP Postdoctoral
   grant 2019/11364-0. SR acknowledges DST, India project grant
   ECR/2017/001046.
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NR 106
TC 41
Z9 41
U1 4
U2 35
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0277-3791
EI 1873-457X
J9 QUATERNARY SCI REV
JI Quat. Sci. Rev.
PD MAR 1
PY 2021
VL 255
AR 106825
DI 10.1016/j.quascirev.2021.106825
EA FEB 2021
PG 15
WC Geography, Physical; Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Physical Geography; Geology
GA QL0NZ
UT WOS:000620778300013
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Singh, P
   Nedumaran, S
   Traore, PCS
   Boote, KJ
   Rattunde, HFW
   Prasad, PVV
   Singh, NP
   Srinivas, K
   Bantilan, MCS
AF Singh, Piara
   Nedumaran, S.
   Traore, P. C. S.
   Boote, K. J.
   Rattunde, H. F. W.
   Prasad, P. V. Vara
   Singh, N. P.
   Srinivas, K.
   Bantilan, M. C. S.
TI Quantifying potential benefits of drought and heat tolerance in rainy
   season sorghum for adapting to climate change
SO AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST METEOROLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE Genetic adaptation; Plant traits; Crop modeling; Sorghum model; Climate
   change factors
ID GRAIN-SORGHUM; CROP PRODUCTION; LEAF-AREA; SEED-SET; MODEL; ROOT;
   AGRICULTURE; PHYSIOLOGY; WATER; ADAPTATION
AB Maintaining high levels of productivity under climate change will require developing cultivars that are able to perform under varying drought and heat stresses and with maturities that match water availability. The CSM-CERES-Sorghum model was used to quantify the potential benefits of altering crop life cycle, enhancing yield potential traits, and incorporating drought and heat tolerance in the commonly grown cultivar types at two sites each in India (cv. CSV 15 at both Akola and Indore) and Mali (cv. CSM 335 at Samanko and cv. CSM 63E at Cinzana), West Africa. Under current climate CSV 15 on average matured in 108 days and produced 3790 kg ha(-1) grain yield at Akola; whereas at Indore it matured in 115 days and produced 3540 kg ha(-1) grain yield. Similarly under current climate, CSM 335 matured in 120 days and produced 2700 kg ha(-1) grain yield at Samanko; whereas CSM 63E matured in 85 days at Cinzana and produced 2210 kg ha(-1) grain yield. Decreasing crop life cycle duration of cultivars by 10% decreased yields at all the sites under both current and future climates. In contrast, increasing crop life cycle by 10% increased yields up to 12% at Akola, 9% at Indore, 8% at Samanko and 33% at Cinzana. Enhancing yield potential traits (radiation use efficiency, relative leaf size and partitioning of assimilates to the panicle each increased by 10%) in the longer cycle cultivars increased the yields by 11-18% at Akola, 17-19% at Indore, 10-12% at Samanko and 14-25% at Cinzana under current and future climates of the sites. Except for the Samanko site, yield gains were larger by incorporating drought tolerance than heat tolerance under the current climate. However, under future climates yield gains were higher by incorporating heat tolerance at Akola, Samanko and Cinzana, but not at Indore. Net benefits of incorporating both drought and heat tolerance increased yield up to 17% at Akola, 9% at Indore, 7% at Samanko and 16% at Cinzana under climate change. It is concluded that different combinations of traits will be needed to increase and sustain productivity of sorghum in current and future climates at these target sites and that the CSM-CERES-Sorghum model can be used to quantify benefits of incorporating certain traits. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
C1 [Singh, Piara; Nedumaran, S.; Singh, N. P.; Srinivas, K.; Bantilan, M. C. S.] Int Crops Res Inst Semi Arid Trop, Patancheru 502324, Andhra Pradesh, India.
   [Traore, P. C. S.; Rattunde, H. F. W.] Int Crops Res Inst Semi Arid Trop, Bamako 320, Mali.
   [Boote, K. J.] Univ Florida, Dept Agron, IFAS, Gainesville, FL 32611 USA.
   [Prasad, P. V. Vara] Kansas State Univ, Dept Agron, Manhattan, KS 66506 USA.
C3 CGIAR; International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid-Tropics
   (ICRISAT); CGIAR; International Crops Research Institute for the
   Semi-Arid-Tropics (ICRISAT); State University System of Florida;
   University of Florida; Kansas State University
RP Singh, P (corresponding author), Int Crops Res Inst Semi Arid Trop, Patancheru 502324, Andhra Pradesh, India.
EM p.singh@cgiar.org
RI ; Prasad, P.V. Vara/B-3835-2012; Traore, Pierre C. Sibiry/M-5629-2017
OI Nedumaran, Swamikannu/0000-0003-4755-1769; Prasad, P.V.
   Vara/0000-0001-6632-3361; Boote, Kenneth/0000-0002-1358-5496; Traore,
   Pierre C. Sibiry/0000-0001-8881-4794
FU CGIAR Research Program on Policies, Institutions and Markets; Global
   Futures Project; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; CGIAR Research
   Program on Climate Change, Agricultural and Food Security (CCAFS); Dry
   land Cereals
FX This work was supported in part by the CGIAR Research Program on
   Policies, Institutions and Markets, The Global Futures Project funded by
   the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the CGIAR Research Program on
   Climate Change, Agricultural and Food Security (CCAFS) and Dry land
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NR 52
TC 67
Z9 73
U1 0
U2 54
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0168-1923
EI 1873-2240
J9 AGR FOREST METEOROL
JI Agric. For. Meteorol.
PD FEB 15
PY 2014
VL 185
BP 37
EP 48
DI 10.1016/j.agrformet.2013.10.012
PG 12
WC Agronomy; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture; Forestry; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA 300XV
UT WOS:000330498200005
OA Green Accepted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Brandt, DH
AF Brandt, Denise Hoffman
BE Hou, J
   Spencer, B
   Way, T
   Yocom, K
TI CITY SINK-SINKING CITIES Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying about the
   Carbon Cycle and Love Climate-Adaptive Design and Planning
SO NOW URBANISM: THE FUTURE CITY IS HERE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
C1 [Brandt, Denise Hoffman] CUNY City Coll, Landscape Architecture, New York, NY 10021 USA.
   [Brandt, Denise Hoffman] Hoffman Brandt Projects LLC, Brooklyn, NY 11215 USA.
C3 City University of New York (CUNY) System; City College of New York
   (CUNY)
RP Brandt, DH (corresponding author), CUNY City Coll, Landscape Architecture, New York, NY 10021 USA.
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NR 20
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Z9 0
U1 0
U2 1
PU ROUTLEDGE
PI ABINGDON
PA 2 PARK SQ, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXFORD, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-415-71786-1; 978-1-315-75306-5; 978-0-415-71785-4
PY 2015
BP 243
EP 258
PG 16
WC Architecture; Urban Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Architecture; Urban Studies
GA BC1OD
UT WOS:000350308200023
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Tsunoda, Y
   Kita, K
   Yasaka, M
AF Tsunoda, Yuuki
   Kita, Kazuhito
   Yasaka, Michiyasu
TI Climate impacts on high-intensity sapling mortality: Comparative study
   and future warnings for <i>Larix kaempferi </i>, <i>Abies
   sachalinensis</i> , and <i>Picea glehnii</i>
SO FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; High -intensity mortality; Future predictions; Bayesian
   approach; Larix kaempferi; Abies sachalinensis; Picea glehnii
ID TREE MORTALITY; CAVITATION RESISTANCE; GROWTH IRRADIANCE; LEAF ANATOMY;
   RESPONSES; PHOTOINHIBITION; PHOTOSYNTHESIS; ACCLIMATION; SEEDLINGS;
   DROUGHT
AB Climate change profoundly affects plant viability and forest dynamics, creating uncertainty in future forest management. Post -planting, high -intensity sapling mortality may require costly replanting, disrupting plans, and risking forest management goals. Therefore, this study focused on high -intensity sapling mortality (mortality rates exceeding 30 %) in Larix kaempferi , Abies sachalinensis , and Picea glehnii planted in northern Japan attributed to summer drought. Utilizing a dataset spanning approximately three decades, the correlation between high -intensity mortality occurrence and climatic stress was explored employing a Bayesian approach. Additionally, the probability of high -intensity mortality occurrence by the end of this century was predicted based on two representative climate scenarios (RCP2.6 and RCP8.5). The predictive accuracy of high -intensity mortality occurrence probabilities exceeded 70 % after comprehensive consideration of climatic stress factors, thereby accentuating the robustness of the proposed model. These encompass the antecedent precipitation index ( API ), which serves as a soil drought indicator; 30 -day mean daily maximum temperature ( MaxTMP ); 30 -day mean daily total solar radiation ( TSR ); and day of year ( DOY ). All sapling species manifested a pronounced negative correlation between API and the probability of high -intensity mortality occurrence, whereas TSR exhibited a positive impact on this probability. Additionally, MaxTMP positively influenced this probability for L. kaempferi and A. sachalinensis . Delving into interspecific differentials, API exhibited the most pronounced impact on P. glehnii in comparison to the other two tree species, whereas TSR exerted a substantial influence on A. sachalinensis and P. glehnii . The susceptibility to MaxTMP was hierarchically ordered as L. kaempferi > A. sachalinensis > P. glehnii . DOY , used to assess phenological effects like leaf morphology, negatively affected the probability of high -intensity mortality occurrence exclusively for L. kaempferi . The median probability of highintensity mortality occurrence in Hokkaido, calculated from the estimated probabilities across all regions of Hokkaido (encompassing non -forested areas but excluding remote islands), at a 1 km resolution, was 0.37 for L. kaempferi , 0.57 for A. sachalinensis , and 0.41 for P. glehnii under RCP2.6 by the century 's end. These probabilities have decreased in comparison to those observed in 2018 -2022. In stark contrast, under RCP8.5, the probabilities soared to 0.91, 0.87, and 0.56, representing an increase of 2.12 times for L. kaempferi , 1.36 times for A. sachalinensis , and 1.14 times for P. glehnii in comparison to 2018 -2022. Even the least affected species, P. glehnii , witnessed a increase in mortality probability. This study underscores the importance of forest management and adaptation to climate change.
C1 [Tsunoda, Yuuki; Kita, Kazuhito; Yasaka, Michiyasu] Hokkaido Res Org, Forestry Res Inst, Bibai, Hokkaido, Japan.
RP Tsunoda, Y (corresponding author), Hokkaido Res Org, Forestry Res Inst, Bibai, Hokkaido, Japan.
EM tsunoda-yuuki@hro.or.jp
OI Tsunoda, Yuuki/0009-0008-5309-7690
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NR 50
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 1
U2 2
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 0378-1127
EI 1872-7042
J9 FOREST ECOL MANAG
JI For. Ecol. Manage.
PD JUL 1
PY 2024
VL 563
AR 121996
DI 10.1016/j.foreco.2024.121996
EA MAY 2024
PG 10
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA UJ5G6
UT WOS:001247697300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Laub, M
   Corbeels, M
   Ndungu, SM
   Mucherumuna, MW
   Mugendi, D
   Yegon, R
   Waswa, W
   Vanlauwe, B
   Six, J
AF Laub, Moritz
   Corbeels, Marc
   Ndungu, Samuel Mathu
   Mucherumuna, Monicah Wanjiku
   Mugendi, Daniel
   Yegon, Rebecca
   Waswa, Wycliffe
   Vanlauwe, Bernard
   Six, Johan
TI Shifting focus from external to in situ organic resources - The redesign
   of four tropical long-term experiments
SO EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF AGRONOMY
LA English
DT Article
DE Soil organic matter; Intercropping; Legumes; Maize; Regenerative
   agriculture; MBILI
ID CARBON-USE EFFICIENCY; SOIL CARBON; EXTRACTION METHOD; MATTER;
   MANAGEMENT; AGROECOSYSTEMS; PRODUCTIVITY; NITROGEN; INPUTS; YIELD
AB Long-term experiments (LTEs) are critical for evaluating strategies that can maintain or increase crop yields, soil fertility and soil organic carbon (SOC), and help adapt to climate change. Yet, scientific knowledge is advancing and research questions are evolving. Therefore, it is important to review the objectives of LTEs over time. A change in their design may be necessary to keep the experimental treatments scientifically interesting, innovative, and relevant in the context of evolving agricultural challenges. Here, we describe the process of redesigning four LTEs in Kenya. These LTEs are unique in that they represent four different pedoclimatic conditions but with identical experimental treatments across sites. Initially, they focused on investigating how to maintain or increase SOC and maize yields over time by applying a combination of mineral nitrogen (N) and external organic resources. Specifically, the experimental treatments consisted of maize monoculture with different rates (1.2 and 4 t C ha(-1) yr(-1)) and qualities of organic resources, either with or without mineral N fertilizer input. After about 20 years, it became clear that SOC was lost in most treatments. Therefore, continuing with the current experimental design was not an option. Taking advantage of the fact that the different former treatments led to different levels of soil degradation, we redesigned the LTEs to study the effectiveness of regenerative cropping strategies in rebuilding SOC and increasing crop yields starting from the different levels of soil degradation. The focus shifted from external to in situ organic inputs by increasing the root biomass of the cultivated crops. The newly established cropping system treatments are maize-legume rotation, maize-legume intercropping (double row configuration) and relay intercropping of maize with forage grass. A key finding from the previous phase of the experiments, namely, that external organic inputs with low C:N ratios are most efficient in building SOC, has been incorporated into the redesign. The relative contribution of external versus in situ organic resources is tested by splitting the cropping system treatments into those receiving either farmyard manure or green manure in the form of Tithonia diversifolia prunings and those receiving no external inputs. Split-plot treatments with and without mineral N were retained. The overall objective of studying mechanisms of tropical soil fertility maintenance and, more specifically, SOC formation, remained unchanged. However, the redesign aligned the LTEs with the current state of knowledge and pressing research questions, specifically focusing on the relative effectiveness of in-situ versus external organic inputs in SOC formation.
C1 [Laub, Moritz; Six, Johan] Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Swiss Fed Inst Technol Zurich, Dept Environm Syst Sci, Univ Str 16, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
   [Corbeels, Marc] UPR, CIRAD, AIDA, Ave Agropolis, F-34398 Montpellier, France.
   [Corbeels, Marc] Univ Montpellier, AIDA, CIRAD, Montpellier, France.
   [Corbeels, Marc; Ndungu, Samuel Mathu; Waswa, Wycliffe] Int Inst Trop Agr IITA, ICIPE Cpd, POB 30772-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Mucherumuna, Monicah Wanjiku] Kenyatta Univ, Dept Environm Sci & Educ, POB 43844-00100, Nairobi, Kenya.
   [Mugendi, Daniel; Yegon, Rebecca] Univ Embu, Dept Water & Agr Resource Management, POB 6-60100, Embu, Kenya.
C3 Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology Domain; ETH Zurich; CIRAD;
   Universite de Montpellier; CIRAD; Kenyatta University
RP Laub, M (corresponding author), Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Swiss Fed Inst Technol Zurich, Dept Environm Syst Sci, Univ Str 16, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland.
EM moritz.laub@usys.ethz.ch
RI Corbeels, Marc/ABA-3249-2022; six, johan/J-5228-2015; Vanlauwe,
   Bernard/ADL-7146-2022
OI Laub, Moritz/0000-0003-2415-8067
FU Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen
   Forschung [172940]; Agropolis Fondation [ANR-10-LABX-0001-01]; TOTAL
   Foundation; European Union [869367]; DSCATT Project "Agricultural
   Intensification and Dynamics of Soil Carbon Sequestration in Tropical
   and Temperate Farming Systems" [AF 1802-001, FT C002181]; CGIAR
   Excellence in Agronomy (EiA) Initiative 11
FX The work in the four LTEs in Kenya has been supported by the
   Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen
   Forschung (Grant no. 172940) , the Agropolis Fondation (Grant no.
   ANR-10-LABX-0001-01) , the TOTAL Foundation (patronage agreement) , the
   European Union's Horizon 2020 framework (LANDMARC; Grant no. 869367) ,
   DSCATT Project "Agricultural Intensification and Dynamics of Soil Carbon
   Sequestration in Tropical and Temperate Farming Systems" (Grant nos. AF
   1802-001 and FT C002181) and the CGIAR Excellence in Agronomy (EiA)
   Initiative 11.
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NR 60
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 9
U2 15
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 1161-0301
EI 1873-7331
J9 EUR J AGRON
JI Eur. J. Agron.
PD JUL
PY 2024
VL 157
DI 10.1016/j.eja.2024.127194
EA APR 2024
PG 9
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA SV0I6
UT WOS:001237100300001
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU He, LL
   Zhang, X
   Wang, XX
   Ullah, H
   Liu, YD
   Duan, J
AF He, Lulu
   Zhang, Xuan
   Wang, Xiaoxia
   Ullah, Haseen
   Liu, Yadong
   Duan, Jie
TI Tree Crown Affects Biomass Allocation and Its Response to Site
   Conditions and the Density of <i>Platycladus orientalis</i> Linnaeus
   Plantation
SO FORESTS
LA English
DT Article
DE allometric partitioning theory; Platycladus orientalis; site conditions;
   stand density; crown morphology; biomass allocation
ID LOBLOLLY-PINE; WOOD DENSITY; FOREST HEALTH; GROWTH; STAND; PATTERNS;
   WIDTH; WATER; LEAF; STEM
AB Tree crown plays a crucial role in the process of photosynthesis and the formation of biomass. The site conditions and stand density have a significant impact on tree and crown growth, as well as biomass formation. Understanding crown growth and its influence on the allometric growth of the biomass of various organs under diverse site conditions and densities is critical to comprehending forest adaptation to climate change and management. This study examined the growth of trees, crown, and biomass in 36 plots of young Platycladus orientalis plantations across three site conditions (S1: thin soil on the sunny slope; S2: thick soil on the sunny slope; S3: thin soil on the shady slope) and four densities (D1: <= 1500 plants/hm(2); D2: 1501-2000 plants/hm(2); D3: 2001-3000 plants/hm(2); and D4: >= 3001 plants/hm(2)). The findings of this study showed that S3 demonstrated the best tree growth, with considerably higher DBH and V than S1 and S2. In addition, as the number of trees grew, the average diameter at breast height (DBH), height (H), and volume (V) all decreased greatly. Poor site (S1) suppressed the canopy, decreasing crown width (CW), crown length (CL), crown ratio (CR), crown surface area (CCSA), and crown volume (CCV), while increasing crown efficiency (CEFF). This same trend was seen in D4, where CR, CCSA, and CCV were all much smaller than the other densities, but CEFF was the highest. Subjective and objective indicators were less responsive to changes in crown growth than crown composite indicators like CCSA, CCV, CEFF, and CR. Site condition and density had a major impact on biomass accumulation, with S1 and D4 having a much lower biomass than S2, S3, D1, D2, and D3. More biomass was allocated to the stem in S3 and D1, and more biomass was allocated to branches and leaves in S2, S3, D1, D2, and D3, resulting in a nearly isotropic growth of branches and leaves. The effect of crown indicators on the biomass of each organ varied according to site condition and density. In varied site conditions, crown and DBH ratio (RCD) contributed the most to stem biomass, whereas CL contributed the most to branch and root biomass. CL had the largest effect on biomass accumulation at various densities. This study demonstrates how site condition and density affect tree and crown development and biomass accumulation, providing theoretical guidance for plantation management under climate change.
C1 [He, Lulu; Zhang, Xuan; Wang, Xiaoxia; Ullah, Haseen; Liu, Yadong; Duan, Jie] Beijing Forestry Univ, State Key Lab Efficient Prod Forest Resources, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
   [He, Lulu; Zhang, Xuan; Wang, Xiaoxia; Ullah, Haseen; Liu, Yadong; Duan, Jie] Beijing Forestry Univ, Minist Educ, Key Lab Silviculture & Conservat, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.
   [He, Lulu; Zhang, Xuan; Wang, Xiaoxia; Ullah, Haseen; Liu, Yadong; Duan, Jie] State Forestry & Grassland Adm, Key Lab Silviculture & Forest Ecosyst Arid and Sem, Beijing 10083, Peoples R China.
C3 Beijing Forestry University; Beijing Forestry University
RP Duan, J (corresponding author), Beijing Forestry Univ, State Key Lab Efficient Prod Forest Resources, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.; Duan, J (corresponding author), Beijing Forestry Univ, Minist Educ, Key Lab Silviculture & Conservat, Beijing 100083, Peoples R China.; Duan, J (corresponding author), State Forestry & Grassland Adm, Key Lab Silviculture & Forest Ecosyst Arid and Sem, Beijing 10083, Peoples R China.
EM helulu@bjfu.edu.cn; duanjie@bjfu.edu.cn
RI duan, jie/GPS-4502-2022; Wang, xiaoxia/HCH-6646-2022
OI DUAN, JIE/0000-0002-4562-4787; Ullah, Haseen/0000-0003-0074-5291
FU Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities
FX We acknowledge Shisan Ling Forest Farm for the support in the field
   investigation.
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NR 112
TC 3
Z9 3
U1 17
U2 40
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 1999-4907
J9 FORESTS
JI Forests
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 14
IS 12
AR 2433
DI 10.3390/f14122433
PG 20
WC Forestry
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Forestry
GA DM5I7
UT WOS:001132469700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Giordano, R
   van der Keur, P
   van Bers, C
   Portoghese, I
   Henriksen, HJ
   Hare, M
AF Giordano, Raffaele
   van der Keur, Peter
   van Bers, Caroline
   Portoghese, Ivan
   Henriksen, Hans Jorgen
   Hare, Matt
BE Lekkas, TD
TI CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT IN DROUGHT RISK REDUCTION AND ADAPTATION: FINDINGS
   OF THE CATALYST THINK TANK AS ILLUSTRATED BY THE PUGLIA REGION OF
   SOUTHERN ITALY
SO PROCEEDINGS OF THE 13TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENTAL
   SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
SE Proceedings of the International Conference on Environmental Science and
   Technology
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 13th International Conference on Environmental Science and Technology
   (CEST)
CY SEP 05-07, 2013
CL Athens, GREECE
SP Univ Aegean, Global Network Environm Sci & Technol
DE Natural Hazards; Capacity Development; Drought; Think Tank Process;
   Integrated Drought Management; Puglia Region
ID MANAGEMENT
AB This article presents preliminary findings of the CATALYST project's Think Tank on best practices and capacity development needs for improving Drought Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) and Climate Change Adaptation (CCA) in the European Mediterranean (EUM) region. Where available this article illustrates these findings with examples from the Puglia region in southern Italy. Drought is considered a major natural hazard in the EUM region and will increase in intensity according to many climate-model projections. Under these conditions, it is argued that shifting from crisis management to an integrated risk management approach is crucial in order to implement effective drought management strategies. Several barriers have hampered the shift from crises to risk management. Among them, the communication gaps between scientists and practitioners has played a crucial role. The CATALYST project (http://www.catalyst-project.eu/), funded by the European Commission under Framework Programme 7, seeks to narrow the knowledge gaps in best practices in disaster risk reduction and climate change adaptation by means of a think tank process in which the goal is knowledge sharing on good practices in drought management among representatives of the scientific community, governmental agencies intergovernmental bodies (such as the UN) and NGOs as well as private enterprise. The EUM region is one of the four focus regions in the CATALYST project.
   A workshop on capacity development in drought risk management was organized in Puglia with the aim of identifying the main issues to be addressed in the EUM region and to share the knowledge concerning both good and bad practices identified within the think tank network. Monitoring and early warning were found to be crucial to increasing preparedness under uncertain conditions. Early warning systems should provide timely and effective information through designated organizations that allow individuals and institutions at risk to take action to avoid or reduce the impacts of the hazard and prepare effective responses. Conflict analysis should be carried out in order to facilitate the implementation of drought policies. Past experiences in Puglia highlighted the existence of communication barriers between monitoring and drought risk managers The outcome of the think tank discussion stressed the need for adopting holistic integrating approaches and enhanced communication on uncertainties associated with early warning by including drought in integrated water resources management. Limiting the use of resources, and particularly groundwater abstraction, is of utmost importance in Mediterranean regions as Puglia. Furthermore, what is needed is not only improved climate forecasting, restricted to the physical implications of climate scenarios, but also the reverse, in the form of backcasting, accounting for the preferences of the affected population and their anticipated behavior, thus integrating top-down and bottom-up approaches. Major improvements in drought risk management, however, are not likely to occur without investment in institutional capacity development.
C1 [Giordano, Raffaele; Portoghese, Ivan] CNR, Water Res Inst IRSA, I-70126 Bari, Italy.
   [van der Keur, Peter; Henriksen, Hans Jorgen] Geol Survey Denmark & Greenland GEUS, Copenhagen, Denmark.
   [van Bers, Caroline; Hare, Matt] Seeconsult GmbH, Osnabruck, Germany.
C3 Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR); Istituto di Ricerca sulle
   Acque (IRSA-CNR); Geological Survey Of Denmark & Greenland
RP Giordano, R (corresponding author), CNR, Water Res Inst IRSA, I-70126 Bari, Italy.
EM raffaele.giordano@cnr.it
RI Portoghese, Ivan/AAX-5419-2020; van der Keur, Peter/H-6311-2018;
   GIORDANO, RAFFAELE/AAX-7089-2020
FU European Commission Seventh Framework Programme FP7 [283177]
FX CATALYST is a project funded by the European Commission Seventh
   Framework Programme FP7 (FP7/2007-2013) under grant agreement 283177.
   Any opinions mentioned in this communication are those of the project
   and not necessarily those of the European Commission. We would like, of
   course, to thank the involvement of our Think Tank members without whom
   the project would not be possible. If you would require more
   information, or would like to join the CATALYST Think Tank, please
   email: info@catalyst-project.eu or visit the website
   www.catalystproject.eu
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NR 24
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 11
PU GLOBAL NEST, SECRETARIAT
PI ATHENS
PA UNIV, AEGEAN, 30, VOULGAROKTONOU STR, ATHENS, GR 114 72, GREECE
SN 1106-5516
BN 978-960-7475-51-0
J9 PROC INT CONF ENV SC
PY 2013
PG 11
WC Engineering, Environmental; Environmental Sciences
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S)
SC Engineering; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BB7WL
UT WOS:000346067900051
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT B
AU Goulden, M
   Næss, LO
   Vincent, K
   Adger, WN
AF Goulden, Marisa
   Naess, Lars Otto
   Vincent, Katharine
   Adger, W. Neil
BE Adger, WN
   Lorenzoni, I
   OBrien, KL
TI Accessing diversification, networks and traditional resource management
   as adaptations to climate extremes
SO ADAPTING TO CLIMATE CHANGE: THRESHOLDS, VALUES, GOVERNANCE
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
ID POVERTY REDUCTION; COPING STRATEGIES; VULNERABILITY; DYNAMICS; AFRICA
C1 [Goulden, Marisa; Adger, W. Neil] Univ E Anglia, Sch Dev Studies, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
   [Naess, Lars Otto] Univ Sussex, Inst Dev Studies, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
   [Vincent, Katharine] Univ Witwatersrand, Sch Geog Archaeol & Environm Studies, ZA-2050 Wits, South Africa.
C3 University of East Anglia; University of Sussex; University of
   Witwatersrand
RP Goulden, M (corresponding author), Univ E Anglia, Sch Dev Studies, Tyndall Ctr Climate Change Res, Norwich NR4 7TJ, Norfolk, England.
RI Vincent, Katharine/L-5669-2019; Adger, Neil/F-7676-2010
OI Vincent, Katharine/0000-0003-3152-1522
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NR 27
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Z9 25
U1 0
U2 6
PU CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA THE PITT BUILDING, TRUMPINGTON ST, CAMBRIDGE CB2 1RP, CAMBS, ENGLAND
BN 978-0-521-76485-8
PY 2009
BP 448
EP 464
PG 17
WC Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BBJ98
UT WOS:000307102300029
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Rezvani, SMHS
   de Almeida, NM
   Falcao, MJ
AF Rezvani, Seyed M. H. S.
   de Almeida, Nuno Marques
   Falcao, Maria Joao
TI Climate Adaptation Measures for Enhancing Urban Resilience
SO BUILDINGS
LA English
DT Article
DE climate adaptation measures; urban resilience; risk management (ISO
   31000); asset management (ISO 55000); multicriteria decision analysis
   (MCDA)
ID MANGROVE FORESTS; RISK-ASSESSMENT; HUMAN HEALTH; IMPACTS; FLOOD;
   GOVERNANCE; FRAMEWORK; VULNERABILITY; RESTORATION; VARIABILITY
AB Climate change threatens urban areas globally. Enhancing resilience is crucial, yet the comprehensive clustering of practical climate adaptation measures for use in construction industry decision-making is notably absent. This study investigates and categorizes various climate adaptation measures, justifying each through a lens of risk management, asset management, and previous scientific work. It takes advantage of the innovative digital platform Netobra, which offers an ecosystem for the construction industry, to provide real-world, practical implications of these measures. Informed by the Urban Resilience Evaluation System, ISO 31000 (risk management), and ISO 55000 (asset management), the study sets out to demonstrate the value of these measures in bolstering urban resilience and improving decision-making in the construction industry. Moreover, the study integrates a hotspot detection mechanism for areas at high risk of climate impacts, using multicriteria decision analysis (MCDA)-analytic hierarchy process (AHP) mapping on Netobra. These identified hotspots and corresponding climate adaptation measures will further be incorporated into a Risk-Informed Asset-Centric (RIACT) process, providing valuable insights for climate change mitigation and adaptation strategies in urban development. Through its in-depth analysis, the study aims to contribute to the understanding of how diverse climate adaptation measures can be practically applied in various sectors, thereby enhancing urban resilience and effective risk and asset management.
C1 [Rezvani, Seyed M. H. S.; de Almeida, Nuno Marques] Univ Lisbon, CERIS, Inst Super Tecn, Ave Rovisco Pais 1, P-1049001 Lisbon, Portugal.
   [Falcao, Maria Joao] Lab Nacl Engn Civil, Ave Brasil 101, P-1700075 Lisbon, Portugal.
C3 Universidade de Lisboa; National Civil Engineering Laboratory
RP Rezvani, SMHS; de Almeida, NM (corresponding author), Univ Lisbon, CERIS, Inst Super Tecn, Ave Rovisco Pais 1, P-1049001 Lisbon, Portugal.
EM seyedi.rezvani@tecnico.ulisboa.pt;
   nunomarquesalmeida@tecnico.ulisboa.pt; mjoaofalcao@lnec.pt
RI Almeida, Nuno/B-5243-2016; Seyedi Rezvani, Seyed Mohammad
   Hossein/CAH-0976-2022
OI Seyedi Rezvani, Seyed Mohammad Hossein/0000-0002-2257-5361
FU Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) [UIDB/04625/2020,
   2022.12886.BD]
FX This work is part of the research activity carried out at Civil
   Engineering Research and Innovation for Sustainability (CERIS) and has
   been funded by Fundacao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia (FCT) in the
   framework of project UIDB/04625/2020 and FCT grant number
   "2022.12886.BD" carried out at the Instituto Superior Tecnico (IST).
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NR 173
TC 15
Z9 15
U1 21
U2 58
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2075-5309
J9 BUILDINGS-BASEL
JI BUILDINGS-BASEL
PD SEP
PY 2023
VL 13
IS 9
AR 2163
DI 10.3390/buildings13092163
PG 29
WC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering, Civil
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Construction & Building Technology; Engineering
GA S7YT4
UT WOS:001073294900001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Parkash, R
   Ramniwas, S
   Kajla, B
   Aggarwal, DD
AF Parkash, Ravi
   Ramniwas, Seema
   Kajla, Babita
   Aggarwal, Dau Dayal
TI Divergence of desiccation-related traits in two <i>Drosophila</i>
   species of the <i>takahashii</i> subgroup from the western Himalayas
SO JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY
LA English
DT Article
DE desiccation resistance; dehydration tolerance; rate of water loss;
   acclimation; D. nepalensis; D. takahashii
ID STRESS RESISTANCE; WATER-BALANCE; DROUGHT ACCLIMATION; DEHYDRATION;
   EVOLUTION; MELANOGASTER; POPULATIONS; MECHANISMS; STARVATION; TOLERANCE
AB Drosophila nepalensis is more abundant under colder and drier montane habitats in the western Himalayas compared with Drosophila takahashii, but the mechanistic basis of such a climatic adaptation is largely unknown. We tested the hypothesis that divergence in the physiological basis of desiccation-related traits is consistent with species-specific adaptations to climatic conditions. Drosophila nepalensis showed approximately twofold higher desiccation resistance, hemolymph content as well as carbohydrate content than D. takahashii despite a modest difference in rate of water loss (0.3%. h(-1)). Water loss before succumbing to death (dehydration tolerance) was much higher in D. nepalensis (82.32%) than in D. takahashii (similar to 50%). A greater loss of hemolymph water under desiccation stress until death is associated with higher desiccation resistance in D. nepalensis. In both species, carbohydrates were utilized under desiccation stress, but a higher level of stored carbohydrates was evident in D. nepalensis. Further, we found increased desiccation resistance in D. nepalensis through acclimation whereas D. takahashii lacked such a response. Thus, species-specific divergence in water-balance-related traits in these species is consistent with their adaptations to wet and dry habitats.
C1 [Parkash, Ravi; Ramniwas, Seema; Kajla, Babita; Aggarwal, Dau Dayal] Maharshi Dayanand Univ, Dept Genet, Rohtak 124001, Haryana, India.
C3 Maharshi Dayanand University
RP Ramniwas, S (corresponding author), Maharshi Dayanand Univ, Dept Genet, Type 4-35,MDU Campus, Rohtak 124001, Haryana, India.
EM seema.ramniwas@gmail.com
RI Parkash, Ravi/I-4987-2019
OI Parkash, Ravi/0000-0001-9880-3941; Ramniwas, Seema/0000-0002-4899-4687
FU Council of Scientific and Industrial Research, New Delhi [21(0847)11
   EMR-11]; SRF [09/382(0124)2008-EMR-1]; Department of Science and
   Technology, New Delhi [SR/WOS-A/LS-26/2011]
FX Financial assistance from the Council of Scientific and Industrial
   Research, New Delhi [Emeritus Scientist project no. 21(0847)11 EMR-11
   and SRF fellowship 09/382(0124)2008-EMR-1], is gratefully acknowledged.
   S.R. (Post Doctorate Fellow) and B.K. (Project Fellow) are grateful to
   the Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi, for supporting
   their research through the WOS-A Project [SR/WOS-A/LS-26/2011].
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NR 47
TC 11
Z9 12
U1 0
U2 19
PU COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
PI CAMBRIDGE
PA BIDDER BUILDING, STATION RD, HISTON, CAMBRIDGE CB24 9LF, ENGLAND
SN 0022-0949
EI 1477-9145
J9 J EXP BIOL
JI J. Exp. Biol.
PD JUL
PY 2012
VL 215
IS 13
BP 2181
EP 2191
DI 10.1242/jeb.065730
PG 11
WC Biology; Zoology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Life Sciences & Biomedicine - Other Topics; Zoology
GA 956LH
UT WOS:000305090600011
PM 22675178
OA Bronze
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Santos, E
AF Santos, Eleonora
TI Are Climate Change Strategies Effective in Managing Urban Water
   Resources? The Case of Portugal
SO SUSTAINABILITY
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change adaptation; sustainable water management; urban water
   resources; rainwater harvesting systems; reclaimed water use
ID CHANGE IMPACTS; REUSE; QUALITY
AB This study examines the relationship between climate mitigation, adaptation strategies, and water management practices in Portugal from 2015 to 2021. Utilizing climate and water resource data from 2015 to 2021, including meteorological data (emperature, rainfall), wastewater treatment volumes, and energy efficiency metrics, the data are sourced from national agencies such as IPMA, ERSAR, APA, and Eurostat. The methodology employs correlation analysis to assess the relationships between climate variables (e.g., temperature, rainfall) and water resource indicators (e.g., reclaimed wastewater, energy efficiency). Despite notable reductions in greenhouse gas emissions and improvements in wastewater treatment efficiency, water resource stability remains a complex issue, particularly with regional disparities such as severe droughts in the Algarve. Additionally, the study evaluates the effectiveness of rainwater harvesting systems, reclaimed wastewater, and infiltration facilities, revealing a decline in reclaimed wastewater efficiency despite increased wastewater treatment. Rainwater harvesting systems (RWHSs) offer resilience, but their broader adoption is hindered by high costs and public perception challenges. Key recommendations include the development of resilient infrastructure, enhanced support for reclaimed water use, and increased investment in research to address water management challenges amid climate variability.
C1 [Santos, Eleonora] Ctr Appl Res Management & Econ, P-2411901 Leiria, Portugal.
RP Santos, E (corresponding author), Ctr Appl Res Management & Econ, P-2411901 Leiria, Portugal.
EM eleonora.santos@ipleiria.pt
RI Santos, Eleonora/AAR-6445-2020
OI Santos, Eleonora/0000-0003-4693-0804
FU National Funds of the FCT-Portuguese Foundation for Science and
   Technology;  [UIDB/04928/2020];  [CEECINST/00051/2018]
FX This research is financed by National Funds of the FCT-Portuguese
   Foundation for Science and Technology within the project <<
   UIDB/04928/2020 >> and under the Scientific Employment
   Stimulus-Institutional Call CEECINST/00051/2018.
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NR 58
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 0
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2071-1050
J9 SUSTAINABILITY-BASEL
JI Sustainability
PD NOV
PY 2024
VL 16
IS 22
AR 9664
DI 10.3390/su16229664
PG 17
WC Green & Sustainable Science & Technology; Environmental Sciences;
   Environmental Studies
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA N7Y8Q
UT WOS:001366454400001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Guardaro, M
   Gastelum, A
   Winkle, R
   Encinas, MM
   Vanos, J
   Bassett, S
   Hondula, D
AF Guardaro, Melissa
   Gastelum, Augie
   Winkle, Ryan
   Encinas, Mary Munoz
   Vanos, Jennifer
   Bassett, Sarah
   Hondula, David
TI HeatReady Neighborhoods: A Planning Rubric for Extreme Heat
SO JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN PLANNING ASSOCIATION
LA English
DT Article; Early Access
DE Extreme heat; community; urban planning; equity; resilience
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; HEALTH IMPACTS; ACTION PLANS; SOCIAL
   VULNERABILITY; RESILIENCE; REDUCE; INDEX
AB Problem, research strategy, and findingsRising temperatures and prolonged heat waves present significant challenges for all communities and are further exacerbated by socioeconomic and spatial vulnerabilities. Extreme heat impacts are amplified in areas with historic underinvestment in infrastructure, discriminatory redlining practices, and limited access to cooling amenities. To ethically mitigate and adapt to these impacts, holistically addressing urban heat impacts and coping strategies at the neighborhood level is crucial. Here we present the development of a HeatReady Neighborhoods planning rubric, co-created with community members and academic partners. The rubric evaluated overall HeatReady performance levels based on community-specific values and served as a modular template for assessing heat readiness using the Phoenix (AZ) metropolitan region as a case study.Takeaway for PracticeBy prioritizing hyperlocal, neighborhood-scale needs, the planning rubric can enable communities to optimize their social, physical, and natural assets for improved resilience to extreme heat and other slow-moving natural hazards. This adaptable model can guide planners, city officials, and community leaders in co-creating strategies with neighborhoods to effectively identify, mitigate, and build adaptation to the adverse effects of extreme heat, filling a gap in mainstream, agency-led heat action planning.
C1 [Guardaro, Melissa; Encinas, Mary Munoz; Vanos, Jennifer] Arizona State Univ, Sch Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA.
   [Gastelum, Augie; Winkle, Ryan] RAIL CDC, Mesa, AZ USA.
   [Bassett, Sarah] Arizona State Univ, Sch Publ Affairs, Phoenix, AZ USA.
   [Hondula, David] Arizona State Univ, Sch Geog Sci & Urban Planning, Tempe, AZ USA.
C3 Arizona State University; Arizona State University-Tempe; Arizona State
   University; Arizona State University-Downtown Phoenix; Arizona State
   University; Arizona State University-Tempe
RP Guardaro, M (corresponding author), Arizona State Univ, Sch Sustainabil, Tempe, AZ 85281 USA.
EM mguardar@asu.edu; augie@railcdc.org; ryan.d.winkle@gmail.com;
   Mary.Munozencinas@asu.edu; Jenni.vanos@asu.edu; sarahbassett@asu.edu
RI Vanos, Jennifer/AAO-3146-2020; Vanos, Jennifer/S-1552-2017
OI Vanos, Jennifer/0000-0003-1854-9096; Bassett, Sarah
   M./0009-0006-7766-2709; Guardaro, Melissa/0000-0002-1327-9587
FU Arizona State University Healthy Urban Environments Initiative -
   Maricopa County Industrial Development Authority (MCIDA) [AWD00033817];
   ASU Knowledge Exchange for Resilience - Virginia G. Piper Charitable
   Trust; Piper Trust
FX This research was funded by the Arizona State University Healthy Urban
   Environments Initiative, supported by the Maricopa County Industrial
   Development Authority (MCIDA) Award no. AWD00033817. Funding was also
   received from the ASU Knowledge Exchange for Resilience, supported by
   the Virginia G. Piper Charitable Trust. Piper Trust supports
   organizations that enrich health, wellbeing, and opportunity for the
   people of Maricopa County (AZ).
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NR 66
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 7
U2 7
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0194-4363
EI 1939-0130
J9 J AM PLANN ASSOC
JI J. Am. Plan. Assoc.
PD 2024 OCT 9
PY 2024
DI 10.1080/01944363.2024.2396923
EA OCT 2024
PG 15
WC Regional & Urban Planning; Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Public Administration; Urban Studies
GA I3R1Q
UT WOS:001329453300001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Amiraslani, F
   Dragovich, D
AF Amiraslani, Farshad
   Dragovich, Deirdre
TI A Social Dimension of Adaptation and Mitigation of Climate Change:
   Empowering Local Rural Communities to Confront Extreme Poverty
SO CLIMATE
LA English
DT Article
DE social dimension; adaptation; mitigation; rural communities; poverty;
   women empowerment
ID CARBON SEQUESTRATION PROJECT; DESERTIFICATION; IRAN
AB Climate change impacts occur at varying spatial scales requiring appropriately scaled responses. In impoverished rural areas, adapting to or mitigating the effects of climate change is challenging, with any short-term impairment to precarious livelihoods likely triggering negative community responses even if people are aware of long-term benefits. The paper will discuss a community-based carbon sequestration project in eastern Iran. It started in 2003 and since then has been expanded widely. It was nominated by UNDP as one of 10 transformative projects in Asia/Pacific in 2016. Over the past 20 years, the project has targeted improving the livelihood of the local communities while addressing local measures to adapt to/mitigate climate change. The paper elaborates on the formation of village development groups as pivotal drivers of success by highlighting local income-generating schemes and project documentation. Key lessons for climate change adaptation can be learnt and are applicable to other developing countries. Extreme poverty in rural areas facing climate change could be tackled through implementing bottom-up approaches in which local communities can be respected and engaged in co-leadership and planning.
C1 [Amiraslani, Farshad] Int 4 1000 Initiat, Sci & Tech Comm, Tehran 16118, Iran.
   [Dragovich, Deirdre] Univ Sydney, Sch Geosci, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia.
C3 University of Sydney
RP Amiraslani, F (corresponding author), Int 4 1000 Initiat, Sci & Tech Comm, Tehran 16118, Iran.
EM fami8991@alumni.sydney.edu.au; deirdre.dragovich@sydney.edu.au
RI Amiraslani, Farshad/AAF-4024-2020
CR Afokpe PMK, 2022, CAH AGRIC, V31, DOI 10.1051/cagri/2021037
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   [Anonymous], 2016, UNDP 10 Solutions to Help Meet the SDGs in Asia and the Pacific
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   [Anonymous], 2017, UNDP Extend Co-Op on Carbon Sequestration Project
   [Anonymous], 2014, Toiran.com International Doll Museum
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   Azernews Iran, 2022, Exports $64mn Worth of Handwoven Carpets
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NR 53
TC 0
Z9 0
U1 0
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
EI 2225-1154
J9 CLIMATE
JI Climate
PD DEC
PY 2023
VL 11
IS 12
AR 240
DI 10.3390/cli11120240
PG 16
WC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA DI8H1
UT WOS:001131489700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Meng, SS
   Mozumder, P
AF Meng, Sisi
   Mozumder, Pallab
TI Spatial heterogeneity of preferences for sea-level rise adaptation:
   Empirical evidence from yearlong and seasonal residents in Florida
SO CLIMATE RISK MANAGEMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change adaptation; Sea-level rise; Choice experiment; Spatial
   heterogeneity; Willingness to Pay (WTP); Yearlong and seasonal residents
ID WILLINGNESS-TO-PAY; CLIMATE-CHANGE MITIGATION; SMALL-ISLAND COMMUNITIES;
   CHOICE EXPERIMENT; STORM-SURGE; COASTAL; VALUATION; ATTITUDES; MODELS;
   VALUES
AB A growing body of evidence suggests that the global sea level has been increasing at an accelerating rate. This trend, which is linked to global warming, poses a significant threat to the communities living in low elevation coastal areas. This study aims to investigate public preferences and estimate the economic value of sea-level rise (SLR) adaptation projects in Florida. We compute the households' willingness to pay (WTP) for different attributes of SLR adaptation programs using a series of choice experiments embedded within a household survey of selected communities in Florida. We find strong spatially heterogeneous preferences in both the short-term and long-term adaptation plans. Moreover, Florida's seasonal residents are willing to pay more than yearlong residents due to their higher risk perceptions and higher income levels. There are few studies in the present literature that compare adaptation preferences across this demographic gradient. Thus, the empirical findings can contribute significantly to the design of optimal adaptation programs and policies to tackle the sea-level rise caused by climate change.
C1 [Meng, Sisi] Univ Notre Dame, Keough Sch Global Affairs, 4033 Jenkins & Nanov Halls, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
   [Mozumder, Pallab] Florida Int Univ, Dept Earth & Environm, Dept Econ, Miami, FL USA.
   [Mozumder, Pallab] Florida Int Univ, Inst Environm, Miami, FL USA.
C3 University of Notre Dame; State University System of Florida; Florida
   International University; State University System of Florida; Florida
   International University
RP Meng, SS (corresponding author), Univ Notre Dame, Keough Sch Global Affairs, 4033 Jenkins & Nanov Halls, Notre Dame, IN 46556 USA.
EM smeng@nd.edu; mozumder@fiu.edu
RI Meng, Sisi/AHD-6194-2022
OI Meng, Sisi/0000-0003-0677-2717
FU National Science Foundation [1832693, 2122135]
FX This work was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant
   #1832693, #2122135.
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NR 47
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 5
U2 10
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-0963
J9 CLIM RISK MANAG
JI CLIM. RISK MANAG.
PY 2023
VL 40
AR 100515
DI 10.1016/j.crm.2023.100515
EA APR 2023
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies; Meteorology & Atmospheric
   Sciences
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
GA G6QY1
UT WOS:000990392600001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Igberi, CO
   Omenyi, LO
   Osuji, EP
   Egwu, PN
   Ibrahim-Olesin, S
AF Igberi, Christiana O.
   Omenyi, Louis O.
   Osuji, Emeka P.
   Egwu, Patricia N.
   Ibrahim-Olesin, Sikiru
TI Comparative analysis of the sustainable dimensions of food security with
   COVID-19 and climate change: A case study
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ADVANCED AND APPLIED SCIENCES
LA English
DT Article
DE Comparative analysis; Sustainability; Food security; Food supply chain;
   Climate change; COVID-19
ID AGRICULTURE
AB This study examined the comparative analysis of the sustainable dimension of food security with COVID-19 and climate change in the Ebonyi State of Nigeria. It is aimed at developing a scientific response to the basic dimensions of food security in this era of COVID-19. This study employed purposive and random sampling techniques to select 180 respondents from the area using a structured questionnaire. ANOVA technique was used to validate the quantitative statistics of the results. Results showed that the COVID-19 era caused more harm to agricultural production leading to a drastic reduction in agricultural yields, food supply chain, and agricultural inputs and materials in the area. There was a forceful drop in availability, affordability, accessibility, stability, and utility of agricultural inputs and materials in the area as compared to the period prior to the pandemic which showed significant increases in agricultural yields and the food supply chain. The perception of respondents to climate change was recorded as a major threat affecting food security in the area. Government subsidization of agricultural inputs and materials, as well as the adoption of proven climate change adaptation and mitigation strategies, were overtly recommended. (C) 2022 The Authors. Published by IASE.
C1 [Igberi, Christiana O.; Osuji, Emeka P.; Ibrahim-Olesin, Sikiru] Alex Ekwueme Fed Univ, Dept Agr, Ndufu Alike, Nigeria.
   [Omenyi, Louis O.] Alex Ekwueme Fed Univ, Dept Math & Stat, Ndufu Alike, Nigeria.
   [Egwu, Patricia N.] Ebonyi State Univ, Dept Agr Econ Management & Extens, Abakaliki, Nigeria.
RP Omenyi, LO (corresponding author), Alex Ekwueme Fed Univ, Dept Math & Stat, Ndufu Alike, Nigeria.
EM omenyi.louis@funai.edu.ng
RI Dr Omenyi, Louis/AFO-4492-2022; ibrahim, sikiru/JQW-4990-2023; EMEKA
   EMMANUEL, OSUJI/W-1037-2017
OI EMEKA EMMANUEL, OSUJI/0000-0001-8605-834X; Omenyi,
   Louis/0000-0002-8628-0298
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NR 37
TC 2
Z9 2
U1 0
U2 0
PU INST ADVANCED SCIENCE EXTENSION
PI TAIPEI
PA PO BOX 23-31,, TAIPEI, 00000, TAIWAN
SN 2313-626X
EI 2313-3724
J9 INT J ADV APPL SCI
JI Int. J. Adv. Appl. Sci.
PD JUN
PY 2022
VL 9
IS 6
BP 9
EP 15
DI 10.21833/ijaas.2022.06.002
PG 7
WC Multidisciplinary Sciences
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Science & Technology - Other Topics
GA 2D1GU
UT WOS:000811305200001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Adusu, D
   Anaafo, D
   Abugre, S
   Addaney, M
AF Adusu, Daniel
   Anaafo, David
   Abugre, Simon
   Addaney, Michael
TI Experiential Knowledge of urbanites on climatic changes in the Sunyani
   municipality, Ghana
SO JOURNAL OF URBAN AFFAIRS
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; adaptation and mitigation; urbanites; experiential
   knowledge; Sunyani; Ghana
ID LOCAL KNOWLEDGE; CHANGE ADAPTATION; VARIABILITY
AB Experiential Knowledge (EK) is essential to our understanding of any social system and its evolution over time. With respect to climate change, EK is important because it serves as the basis for locally grounded, and place-sensitive adaptation and mitigation measures. However, despite the rapid urbanization, depletion of vegetative cover, and noticeable changes in the local climate of Sunyani, a mid-sized city in Ghana, limited empirical studies have focused on the experiential knowledge of the population on climatic changes in the city as a way of informing adaptation and mitigation responses. Employing in-depth interviews and focus group discussions, this study examines the experiential knowledge of the people of Sunyani on climatic changes. The study finds that although the residents of Sunyani have no in-depth knowledge of the scientific fundamentals of climate change, they appreciate the rapidly changing climate due to their long-lived experiences and interactions with the natural environment. Consequently, the study recommends the use of experiential knowledge that is locally grounded and place sensitive in tandem with scientific facts for the formulation of climate change adaptation and mitigation responses for Sunyani and other Ghanaian cities.
C1 [Adusu, Daniel] Univ Energy & Nat Resources, Sunyani, Ghana.
   [Anaafo, David] Univ Energy & Nat Resources, Dept Planning & Sustainabil, POB 214, Sunyani, Ghana.
   [Abugre, Simon] Univ Energy & Nat Resources, Dept Forest Sci, Sunyani, Ghana.
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RP Anaafo, D (corresponding author), Univ Energy & Nat Resources, Dept Planning & Sustainabil, POB 214, Sunyani, Ghana.
EM david.anaafo@uenr.edu.gh
RI Adusu, Daniel/AAW-3955-2021; Addaney, Michael/AAT-4157-2021
OI Anaafo, David/0000-0001-7472-9687; Addaney, Michael/0000-0003-4351-1241
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NR 65
TC 4
Z9 4
U1 0
U2 4
PU ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OX14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0735-2166
EI 1467-9906
J9 J URBAN AFF
JI J. Urban Aff.
PD MAR 16
PY 2023
VL 45
IS 3
SI SI
BP 488
EP 504
DI 10.1080/07352166.2022.2044836
EA APR 2022
PG 17
WC Urban Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Urban Studies
GA 9T7ZM
UT WOS:000779539200001
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Semere, M
   Cherinet, A
   Gebreyesus, M
AF Semere, Mihert
   Cherinet, Abirham
   Gebreyesus, Martha
TI Climate resilient traditional agroforestry systems in Silite district,
   Southern Ethiopia
SO JOURNAL OF FOREST SCIENCE
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; biomass carbon stock; climate change; mitigation
ID ALLOMETRIC EQUATIONS; ABOVEGROUND BIOMASS; WEST-AFRICA; ADAPTATION;
   PERCEPTIONS; ADOPTION
AB Agroforestry is recognized as one of the strategies for climate change mitigation and adaptation under the Kyoto protocol. The system has been practiced in Ethiopia for a while by smallholder farmers by incorporating crops with trees providing extensive socio-economic and environmental benefits. This unaccounted benefit of the system needs further and specific study. Thus, this study aimed to examine the resilience of three (homegardens, woodlots, and parkland) traditional agroforestry systems (TAFS) on the basis of biomass carbon accumulation and socio-economic characteristics in Silite district, Southern Ethiopia. Systematic random sampling was employed to collect social and biological data. Height and diameter at breast height (DBH) were measured to determine the biomass carbon stock and a questionnaire was performed for the socio-economic data. The mean differences across the system were analyzed using a post hoc test. Socioeconomic data were analyzed using descriptive statistics and the chi-square test. Climate change awareness was perceived almost by half of the respondents, thus the contribution of TAFS to climate change adaptation and mitigation was revealed socio-economically and ecologically. Carbon stock and socio-economic benefits gained from agroforestry systems consist in a great sink of carbon and food security.
C1 [Semere, Mihert; Cherinet, Abirham; Gebreyesus, Martha] Ethiopian Environm & Forest Res Inst EEFRI, Climate Sci Res, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
RP Semere, M (corresponding author), Ethiopian Environm & Forest Res Inst EEFRI, Climate Sci Res, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
EM smihert@gmail.com
OI Semere, Mihert/0000-0002-3201-8032
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NR 32
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 0
U2 8
PU CZECH ACADEMY AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
PI PRAGUE
PA TESNOV 17, PRAGUE, 117 05, CZECH REPUBLIC
SN 1212-4834
EI 1805-935X
J9 J FOR SCI-PRAGUE
JI J. For. Sci.-Prague
PY 2022
VL 68
IS 4
BP 136
EP 144
DI 10.17221/151/2021-JFS
PG 9
WC Forestry
WE Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI)
SC Forestry
GA 1A5YZ
UT WOS:000791833400002
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Seidl, C
   Wheeler, SA
   Zuo, A
AF Seidl, Constantin
   Wheeler, Sarah Ann
   Zuo, Alec
TI The drivers associated with Murray-Darling Basin irrigators? future farm
   adaptation strategies
SO JOURNAL OF RURAL STUDIES
LA English
DT Article
DE Adoption; Climate change; Planned behaviour; Water markets; Irrigation;
   Adaptation
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION; DROUGHT RELIEF; WATER
   SCARCITY; AGRICULTURE; RISK; UNCERTAINTY; SUCCESSION; VARIABILITY;
   PERCEPTIONS
AB Irrigators in the Murray-Darling Basin will need to adapt to future uncertainty, because of changes in markets, industry structures and climate. Such adaptation can be classified as expansive, accommodating or contractive strategies. Expansive adaptation strategies expand irrigation, accommodating strategies modify existing processes or crops without changing the size of the irrigation component of the farm, whereas contractive strategies reduce irrigation. Using data from a 2015-16 survey of 1,000 southern Murray-Darling Basin irrigators, 19 distinct planned future adaptation strategies are aggregated into expansive, accommodating and contractive adaptation indexes. Seemingly Unrelated Regression was used to model influences associated with irrigators? future adaptation. While 90% of all irrigators were planning for at least one form of farm adaptation, there is some evidence that they prefer expansive adaptation strategies over accommodating and contractive adaptation strategies. It was found that succession planning and past adaptation experience have a statistically significant influence on all planned adaptation indexes. The influence of financial, human, natural, physical and social capital varies between adaptation types, with financial capital variables the strongest statistically significant driver for accommodating adaptation. Expansive and contractive adaptation are more strongly impacted by human and social capital variables.
C1 [Seidl, Constantin; Wheeler, Sarah Ann; Zuo, Alec] Univ Adelaide, Fac Profess, Ctr Global Food & Resources, 10 Pulteney St, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
C3 University of Adelaide
RP Seidl, C (corresponding author), Univ Adelaide, Fac Profess, Ctr Global Food & Resources, 10 Pulteney St, Adelaide, SA 5005, Australia.
EM constantin.seidl@adelaide.edu.au; sarah.wheeler@adelaide.edu.au;
   alec.zuo@adelaide.edu.au
RI Zuo, Alec/AAU-3394-2020; Wheeler, Sarah/H-4000-2017
OI Zuo, Alec/0000-0003-0425-4633; Wheeler, Sarah/0000-0002-6073-3172;
   Seidl, Constantin/0000-0003-0002-075X
FU Australian Research Council [DP200101191, FT140100773]; University of
   Adelaide International Postgraduate Scholarship; Australian Research
   Council [DP200101191] Funding Source: Australian Research Council
FX This work was supported by the Australian Research Council [DP200101191
   and FT140100773] , and a University of Adelaide International
   Postgraduate Scholarship.
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NR 93
TC 13
Z9 13
U1 1
U2 17
PU PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, ENGLAND
SN 0743-0167
EI 1873-1392
J9 J RURAL STUD
JI J. Rural Stud.
PD APR
PY 2021
VL 83
BP 187
EP 200
DI 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2020.10.048
EA APR 2021
PG 14
WC Geography; Regional & Urban Planning
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography; Public Administration
GA RI1RW
UT WOS:000636688600020
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Harrison, S
   Jones, D
   Anderson, K
   Shannon, S
   Betts, RA
AF Harrison, Stephan
   Jones, Darren
   Anderson, Karen
   Shannon, Sarah
   Betts, Richard A.
TI Is ice in the Himalayas more resilient to climate change than we
   thought?
SO GEOGRAFISKA ANNALER SERIES A-PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate change; Himalaya; rock glaciers; water
AB In the Himalaya, climate change threatens mountain water resources as glaciers melt and changes in runoff and water availability are likely to have considerable negative impacts on ecological and human systems. While much has been written on the effect of climate change on glaciers in the Himalaya and its impact on sustainability, almost nothing has been published on rock glaciers in the region and their role in maintaining water supplies as the climate warms. Rock glaciers are important components of the Himalayan hydrological system because they are present in almost all regions of the Himalaya and are climatically more resilient than other glacier types owing to an insulating layer of debris cover. Research from other mountain regions shows that they contain potentially important water stores, although in the Himalaya, there is almost no information on their number, spatial distribution and response to future climate change. The extent to which this contributes to higher resilience of the Himalayan cryosphere as a whole is still an open question. This paper argues that research into Himalayan rock glaciers that reveals their hydrological significance is critical for underpinning climate change adaptation strategies and to ensure that this highly populated region is in a strong position to meet sustainable development goals.
C1 [Harrison, Stephan; Jones, Darren; Anderson, Karen] Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Penryn Campus, Penryn TR10 9EZ, Cornwall, England.
   [Shannon, Sarah] Univ Bristol, Bristol Glaciol Ctr, Sch Geog Sci, Bristol, Avon, England.
   [Betts, Richard A.] Met Off Hadley Ctr, Exeter, Devon, England.
   [Betts, Richard A.] Univ Exeter, Global Syst Inst, Exeter, Devon, England.
C3 University of Exeter; University of Bristol; Met Office - UK; Hadley
   Centre; University of Exeter
RP Harrison, S (corresponding author), Univ Exeter, Coll Life & Environm Sci, Penryn Campus, Penryn TR10 9EZ, Cornwall, England.
EM stephan.harrison@exeter.ac.uk
RI Anderson, Karen/ABC-3524-2021; Betts, Richard/P-8976-2015; Shannon,
   Sarah/LTE-8768-2024
OI Anderson, Karen/0000-0002-3289-2598
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NR 25
TC 9
Z9 9
U1 2
U2 15
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 0435-3676
EI 1468-0459
J9 GEOGR ANN A
JI Geogr. Ann. Ser. A-Phys. Geogr.
PD JAN 2
PY 2021
VL 103
IS 1
BP 1
EP 7
DI 10.1080/04353676.2021.1888202
PG 7
WC Geography, Physical; Geology
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Physical Geography; Geology
GA QO3FT
UT WOS:000623031000001
OA hybrid, Green Published
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Kabir, ME
   Serrao-Neumann, S
   Davey, P
   Hossain, M
   Alam, MT
AF Kabir, Mohammad Ehsanul
   Serrao-Neumann, Silvia
   Davey, Peter
   Hossain, Moazzem
   Alam, Md. Touhidul
TI Drivers and temporality of internal migration in the context of
   slow-onset natural hazards: Insights from north-west rural Bangladesh
SO INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISASTER RISK REDUCTION
LA English
DT Article
DE Vulnerability; Tipping points; Climate change adaptation; Internal
   displacement; Disaster and microfinance
ID SEA-LEVEL RISE; CLIMATE-CHANGE; ADAPTATION; VARIABILITY; RESILIENCE
AB This paper examines the association between slow-onset natural hazards and the temporal aspects of human mobility-that is, short-term and long-term internal migration in the context of north-west Bangladesh. The paper contributes to the current understanding on the multiple stressors influencing individual's decisions to migrate from their rural origin, while examining the interplay between factors such as tipping points of migration (identified as drivers of migration), socio-demographic variables, and the contexts of slow-onset natural hazards. The analysis is based on empirical data relating to disadvantaged internal migrants or their household members living in drought-prone and riverine areas. A binary logistic regression model is used to analyse how various factors influence the temporality of migration. Key findings indicate that in the context of the natural hazards studied, financial stress at the household level and lack of economic resources are strongly associated with people's decisions to migrate for the-long or short-term. Based on such findings, the paper argues for diversified policy interventions for different groups of internal migrants in order to address difficulties associated with their mobility to and settlement at new locations.
C1 [Kabir, Mohammad Ehsanul] Griffith Univ, Sch Environm & Sci, Room 0-36A,N13,170 Kessels Rd, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Serrao-Neumann, Silvia] Univ Waikato, Fac Arts & Social Sci, Sch Social Sci, Hamilton 3240, New Zealand.
   [Kabir, Mohammad Ehsanul; Serrao-Neumann, Silvia] Griffith Univ, Cities Res Inst, 170 Kessels Rd, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Davey, Peter] Griffith Univ, Sch Environm & Sci, 170 Kessels Rd, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
   [Hossain, Moazzem] Griffith Univ, Griffith Business Sch, Dept Int Business & Asian Studies, Nathan Campus, Brisbane, Qld, Australia.
   [Alam, Md. Touhidul] Univ Dhaka, Constituent Inst A, Dhaka Sch Econ, 4-C Eskaton Garden Rd, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh.
C3 Griffith University; University of Waikato; Griffith University;
   Griffith University; Griffith University; University of Dhaka
RP Kabir, ME (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Sch Environm & Sci, Room 0-36A,N13,170 Kessels Rd, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.; Kabir, ME (corresponding author), Griffith Univ, Cities Res Inst, 170 Kessels Rd, Brisbane, Qld 4111, Australia.
EM ehsanul.kabir@griffithuni.edu.au; s.neumann@waikato.ac.nz;
   peter.davey@griffith.edu.au; m.hossain@griffith.edu.au;
   touhidul.alam@dsce.edu.bd
RI Serrao-Neumann, Silvia/K-2470-2012
OI Serrao-Neumann, Silvia/0000-0001-9601-4914; Kabir, Mohammad
   Ehsanul/0000-0001-5438-7376
FU Griffith University Australia
FX The authors would like to acknowledge all the study participants for
   participating in this study. The authors also gratefully acknowledge Dr.
   James McBroom (Griffith University), Dr. Barbara T.H. Yen (Griffith
   University) and Dr. Gurudeo Anand Tularam (Griffith University) for
   valuable suggestions. This study is research work of the first author's
   PhD program who received a scholarship with a small research grant from
   the Griffith University Australia.
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NR 88
TC 29
Z9 29
U1 0
U2 36
PU ELSEVIER
PI AMSTERDAM
PA RADARWEG 29, 1043 NX AMSTERDAM, NETHERLANDS
SN 2212-4209
J9 INT J DISAST RISK RE
JI Int. J. Disaster Risk Reduct.
PD OCT
PY 2018
VL 31
BP 617
EP 626
DI 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2018.06.010
PG 10
WC Geosciences, Multidisciplinary; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences;
   Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED); Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geology; Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences; Water Resources
GA GV7ZE
UT WOS:000446353300060
OA Green Submitted
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lee, O
   Kim, S
AF Lee, Okjeong
   Kim, Sangdan
TI Estimation of Future Probable Maximum Precipitation in Korea Using
   Multiple Regional Climate Models
SO WATER
LA English
DT Article
DE climate change; ensemble; probable maximum precipitation; RCM;
   scale-invariance
ID PMP
AB In this study, future probable maximum precipitations (PMPs) based on future meteorological variables produced from three regional climate models (RCMs) of 50-km spatial resolution provided by Coordinated Regional Climate Downscaling Experiment (CORDEX) are projected. In order to estimate future PMPs, the hydro-meteorological method is applied. The key future meteorological variable used to analyze the rate of change of future PMPs is the dew-point temperature. Future 12-h persistence 100-year return period extreme dew-point temperatures obtained from future daily dew-point temperature time series by using the scale-invariance method are applied to estimate future PMPs. As a result of estimating future PMPs using several RCMs and representative concentration pathways (RCPs) scenarios, the spatial distribution of future PMPs is expected to be similar to that of the present, but PMPs tend to increase in the future. In addition, it can be seen that the difference in PMPs estimated from various RCMs and RCP scenarios is getting bigger in the future. Especially after 2070, the difference has increased even more. In the short term, it is proposed to establish climate change adaptation policies with an 18% increase in PMPs, which is the ensemble average in the future year 2050.
C1 [Lee, Okjeong] Pukyong Natl Univ, Div Earth Environm Syst Sci, Major Environm Engn, Busan 48513, South Korea.
   [Kim, Sangdan] Pukyong Natl Univ, Dept Environm Engn, Busan 48513, South Korea.
C3 Pukyong National University; Pukyong National University
RP Kim, S (corresponding author), Pukyong Natl Univ, Dept Environm Engn, Busan 48513, South Korea.
EM lover1804@nate.com; skim@pknu.ac.kr
OI Lee, Okjeong/0000-0001-5442-7024
FU Korea Agency for Infrastructure Technology Advancement (KAIA) - Ministry
   of Land, Infrastructure and Transport [18AWMP-B083066-05]; National
   Research Foundation of Korea [21A20151713014] Funding Source: Korea
   Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science
   & Technology Information Service (NTIS)
FX This work is supported by the Korea Agency for Infrastructure Technology
   Advancement (KAIA) grant funded by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure
   and Transport (Grant 18AWMP-B083066-05).
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NR 25
TC 16
Z9 17
U1 0
U2 3
PU MDPI
PI BASEL
PA ST ALBAN-ANLAGE 66, CH-4052 BASEL, SWITZERLAND
SN 2073-4441
J9 WATER-SUI
JI Water
PD MAY
PY 2018
VL 10
IS 5
AR 637
DI 10.3390/w10050637
PG 17
WC Environmental Sciences; Water Resources
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Water Resources
GA GJ3LO
UT WOS:000435196700103
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT C
AU Ariani, M
   Hervani, A
   Setyanto, P
AF Ariani, M.
   Hervani, A.
   Setyanto, P.
GP IOP
TI Climate smart agriculture to increase productivity and reduce greenhouse
   gas emission-a preliminary study
SO INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CLIMATE CHANGE (ICCC 2018)
SE IOP Conference Series-Earth and Environmental Science
LA English
DT Proceedings Paper
CT 3rd International Conference on Climate Change (ICCC)
CY NOV 27-28, 2018
CL Solo City, INDONESIA
ID METHANE EMISSION; RICE; INTENSITY
AB Addressing the climate change on agricultural sector as an approach to increase rice productivity, which at the same time also mitigate the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission, economically feasible, socially acceptable and hence appropriate for policy support, is a special challenge. This study provided Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) technology to address the multi-dimensional complexity in agriculture system including climate, economic and technology for farmers and the community. The research locations were selected on particularly major irrigated rice fields at three districts in Central Java, i. e. Banjarnegara, Purbalingga and Banyumas District. Demo plots were used to compare the Farmers practice with CSA technology. The CSA technology used were: leaf color chart to apply N fertilizer, paddy soil test kit for determining basic fertilizer, organic matter amendment and intermittent irrigation. This study shows that CSA reduced GHG emissions than Farmers practice between 7-23% of Global Warming Potential and achieved economic benefit between 42-129%. Introducing CSA to the farmers and community is recommended to cope with climate change as the adaptation and mitigation actions. Despite very clear advantages in reducing GHG emission and climate change adaptation, many constraints must be faced by the implementation of CSA in the field.
C1 [Ariani, M.; Hervani, A.] Indonesian Agr Environm Res Inst, Jakenan Jaken Main Rd Km 5 POB 5, Jaken 59182, Pati, Indonesia.
   [Setyanto, P.] Minist Agr Indonesia, Directorate Gen Hort, AUP Rd 3 Pasar Minggu, South Jakarta, Indonesia.
C3 Ministry of Agricultire & Rural Development
RP Ariani, M (corresponding author), Indonesian Agr Environm Res Inst, Jakenan Jaken Main Rd Km 5 POB 5, Jaken 59182, Pati, Indonesia.
EM miranti_ariani@yahoo.com
OI Hervani, Anggri/0000-0002-5132-254X; Ariani, Miranti/0000-0001-5052-8661
FU GIZ; ICRAF
FX This research was funded by GIZ collaborated with ICRAF. Thank you to
   all GHG research group member in Indonesian Agricultural Research
   Institute for all the spirit and hard working.
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NR 15
TC 8
Z9 8
U1 5
U2 18
PU IOP PUBLISHING LTD
PI BRISTOL
PA DIRAC HOUSE, TEMPLE BACK, BRISTOL BS1 6BE, ENGLAND
SN 1755-1307
J9 IOP C SER EARTH ENV
JI IOP Conf. Ser. Earth Envir. Sci.
PY 2018
VL 200
AR 012024
DI 10.1088/1755-1315/200/1/012024
PG 7
WC Environmental Sciences; Environmental Studies
WE Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Science (CPCI-S); Conference Proceedings Citation Index - Social Science &amp; Humanities (CPCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BM3JF
UT WOS:000462172400024
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Lu, ZJ
   Song, Q
   Liu, KB
   Wu, WB
   Liu, YX
   Xin, R
   Zhang, DM
AF Lu Zhong-jun
   Song Qian
   Liu Ke-bao
   Wu Wen-bin
   Liu Yan-xia
   Xin Rui
   Zhang Deng-mei
TI Rice cultivation changes and its relationships with geographical factors
   in Heilongjiang Province, China
SO JOURNAL OF INTEGRATIVE AGRICULTURE
LA English
DT Article
DE paddy rice; spatio-temporal change; cultivation area; geographical
   factors
ID MULTITEMPORAL MODIS IMAGES; LAND-USE CHANGE; NORTHEAST CHINA;
   CLIMATE-CHANGE; SPATIOTEMPORAL CHANGES; CROPPING SYSTEMS; AREA;
   ADAPTATIONS; MEKONG; AGRICULTURE
AB Rice planting patterns have changed dramatically over the past several decades in northeast China (NEC) due to the combined influence of global change and agricultural policy. Except for its great implications for environmental protection and climate change adaption, the spatio-temporal changes of rice cultivation in NEC are not clear. In this study, we conducted spatio-temporal analyses of NEC's major rice production region, Heilongjiang Province, by using satellite-derived rice cultivation maps. We found that the total cultivated area of rice in Heilongjiang Province increased largely from 1993 to 2011 and it expanded spatially to the northern and eastern part of the Sanjiang Plain. The results also showed that rice cultivation areas experienced a larger increase in the region managed by the Reclamation Management Bureau (RMB) than that managed by the local provincial government. Rice cultivation changes were closely related with those geographic factors over the investigated periods, represented by the geomorphic (slope), climatic (accumulated temperature), and hydrological (watershed) variables. These findings provide clear evidence that crop cultivation in NEC has been modified to better cope with the global change.
C1 [Lu Zhong-jun; Liu Ke-bao; Liu Yan-xia; Xin Rui; Zhang Deng-mei] Heilongjiang Acad Agr Sci, Remote Sensing Technol Ctr, Harbin 150086, Heilongjiang, Peoples R China.
   [Song Qian; Wu Wen-bin] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Minist Agr, Key Lab Agr Remote Sensing, Inst Agr Resources & Reg Planning, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China.
C3 Heilongjiang Academy of Agricultural Sciences; Chinese Academy of
   Agricultural Sciences; Institute of Agricultural Resources & Regional
   Planning, CAAS; Ministry of Agriculture & Rural Affairs
RP Song, Q; Wu, WB (corresponding author), Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Minist Agr, Key Lab Agr Remote Sensing, Inst Agr Resources & Reg Planning, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China.
EM lszyj@126.com; songqian01@caas.cn; wuwenbin@caas.cn
RI song, qian/HDL-9868-2022
FU Opening Foundation of the Key Laboratory of Agricultural Information
   Technology, Ministry of Agriculture, China [2016009]; National Natural
   Science Foundation of-China [41501111, 41271112]
FX This research was financially supported by the Opening Foundation of the
   Key Laboratory of Agricultural Information Technology, Ministry of
   Agriculture, China (2016009) and the National Natural Science Foundation
   of-China (41501111 and 41271112). Moreover, we would like to thank the
   reviewers for their constructive suggestions.
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NR 29
TC 18
Z9 20
U1 5
U2 43
PU ELSEVIER SCI LTD
PI OXFORD
PA THE BOULEVARD, LANGFORD LANE, KIDLINGTON, OXFORD OX5 1GB, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 2095-3119
J9 J INTEGR AGR
JI J. Integr. Agric.
PY 2017
VL 16
IS 10
BP 2274
EP 2282
DI 10.1016/S2095-3119(17)61705-2
PG 9
WC Agriculture, Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA FK0OE
UT WOS:000413178400018
OA hybrid
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Coirolo, C
   Rahman, A
AF Coirolo, Cristina
   Rahman, Atiq
TI Power and differential climate change vulnerability among extremely poor
   people in Northwest Bangladesh: lessons for mainstreaming
SO CLIMATE AND DEVELOPMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE Bangladesh; power resources; vulnerability; climate change adaptation;
   extreme poverty
ID SOCIAL PROTECTION; ADAPTATION; PROGRAMS; POVERTY
AB This article draws on research findings from fieldwork undertaken in Gaibandha District of Northwest Bangladesh from 2009 to 2010 to analyse the influence of power-related factors on climate change vulnerability and adaptation in two rural communities. The principal aim of the research was to explore the factors that shape differentiated vulnerability and adaptive capacity within the two communities, with a focus on extremely poor community members. Findings indicate that climate-related vulnerability is differentiated at the sub-community level, both among different socio-economic, livelihood and social groups, as well as within them. Some of the central factors highlighted by respondents as underpinning differentiation had clear power and inequality dimensions. These include political ties and corruption; community and family networks; and the capability to enforce one's own rights, for example to land, in lieu of access to impartial law enforcement and justice institutions. The article concludes with implications of these findings for supporting adaptive capacity and mainstreaming climate change into planning processes at different levels. In particular, interventions focused on assets may be less important than those directed at power relations, networks and the security dimensions of extreme poverty.
C1 [Coirolo, Cristina] Univ Sussex, Inst Dev Studies, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
   [Rahman, Atiq] BCAS, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
C3 University of Sussex
RP Coirolo, C (corresponding author), Univ Sussex, Inst Dev Studies, Brighton, E Sussex, England.
EM ccoirolo@gmail.com
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NR 40
TC 26
Z9 29
U1 1
U2 35
PU TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
PI ABINGDON
PA 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON OR14 4RN, OXON, ENGLAND
SN 1756-5529
EI 1756-5537
J9 CLIM DEV
JI Clim. Dev.
PD OCT 2
PY 2014
VL 6
IS 4
SI SI
BP 336
EP 344
DI 10.1080/17565529.2014.934774
PG 9
WC Development Studies; Environmental Studies
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Development Studies; Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA AS7YF
UT WOS:000344467100006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Agata, K
AF Agata, Kiyokazu
BA Okuda, N
   Watanabe, K
   Fukumori, K
   Nakano, SI
   Nakazawa, T
BF Okuda, N
   Watanabe, K
   Fukumori, K
   Nakano, SI
   Nakazawa, T
TI A Dynamic Resilience Perspective Toward Integrated Ecosystem Management:
   Biodiversity, Landscape, and Climate
SO BIODIVERSITY IN AQUATIC SYSTEMS AND ENVIRONMENTS: LAKE BIWA
SE SpringerBriefs in Biology
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Alternative stable states; Bistability; Ecosystem disturbance; Ecosystem
   restoration; Food-web dynamics; Global change; Positive feedback;
   Warming
ID ALTERNATIVE STABLE STATES; ONTOGENIC NICHE SHIFTS; REGIME SHIFTS;
   FRESH-WATER; ECOLOGICAL RESILIENCE; SIZE; EUTROPHICATION; GROWTH;
   CONSEQUENCES; TERRESTRIAL
AB Ecosystems often show sudden and drastic shifts in their states following relatively small environmental changes, yet the environmental restoration does not necessarily easily recover the original state. The resilience theory has played a pivotal role in ecosystem management by providing a theoretical basis for such abrupt and irreversible phase transitions (i.e., regime shifts). However, a major concern remains that the existing theory considers ecosystem responses along only a single disturbance axis (e.g., eutrophication), despite the fact that natural ecosystems are subject to multiple anthropogenic disturbances. In this chapter, I introduce ontogenetic niche shifts (i.e., changes in resource use or predation vulnerability during individual growth) as a possible common mechanism of regime shifts. Based on this framework, I show how additional factors not accounted for the basic resilience theory (e.g., species extinction and invasion, habitat loss and fragmentation, and phenological shifts) may affect whether or where regime shifts occur along environmental gradients. I conclude that these results taken together illustrate the importance of interdisciplinary research integrating biodiversity conservation, landscape protection, and climate change adaptation for more effective management of lake ecosystems.
C1 [Agata, Kiyokazu] Kyoto Univ, Dept Biophys, Kyoto 6068501, Japan.
   [Agata, Kiyokazu] Kyoto Univ, Global COE Program Evolut & Biodivers, Kyoto 6068501, Japan.
C3 Kyoto University; Kyoto University
RP Agata, K (corresponding author), Kyoto Univ, Dept Biophys, Kyoto 6068501, Japan.
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NR 89
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 4
U2 25
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG BERLIN
PI BERLIN
PA HEIDELBERGER PLATZ 3, D-14197 BERLIN, GERMANY
SN 2192-2179
BN 978-4-431-54149-3; 978-4-431-54150-9
J9 SPRINGERBRIEF BIOL
PY 2014
BP 69
EP 91
DI 10.1007/978-4-431-54150-9_4
D2 10.1007/978-4-431-54150-9
PG 23
WC Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
WE Book Citation Index – Science (BKCI-S)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Marine & Freshwater Biology
GA BB6EW
UT WOS:000344735500006
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT S
AU Izumi, T
   Shaw, R
AF Izumi, Takako
   Shaw, Rajib
BE Shaw, R
   Izumi, T
TI Civil Society and Cross-Cutting Issues for Risk Reduction: Food
   Security, Health, Human Security, Environment and Microfinance
SO CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATION AND DISASTER RISK REDUCTION: THE ASIAN
   DILEMMA
SE Disaster Risk Reduction
LA English
DT Article; Book Chapter
DE Civil society organizations; Cross cutting issues; Disaster risk
   reduction
ID CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; VULNERABILITY
AB Each agency or individual researcher addresses different cross cutting issues in disaster risk reduction (DRR) based on the areas of their expertise and focuses. These cross cutting issues can be categorized mainly into five groups: Sector-focused (Health, Livelihood, etc.), Target-focused (Elderly, Children Persons with disabilities, etc.), Underlying causes-focused (Environment, Urbanization, etc.), Tool-focused (Information management, Capacity development etc.), and Approach-focused (Multi-hazards, Gender and cultural diversity, Community and volunteer participation etc.). A number of projects and activities that target different cross cutting issues in conjunction with DRR have been implemented by CSOs. Developing a creative and innovative project that can tackle both disaster risks and various cross cutting issues together requires a holistic and scaling-up multidisciplinary approach, and this is an area that CSOs can highly contribute to.
   This chapter addresses five topics as cross cutting issues: food security, health, human security, environment and microfinance. When the capacity of these cross cutting issues is successfully developed, it has a huge impact on DRR improvement. It is discussed why the five topics are important to be included in the cross cutting issues.
C1 [Izumi, Takako] Tohoku Univ, Int Res Inst Disaster Sci, Sendai, Miyagi 980, Japan.
   [Shaw, Rajib] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Global Environm Studies, Kyoto, Japan.
C3 Tohoku University; Kyoto University
RP Izumi, T (corresponding author), Tohoku Univ, Int Res Inst Disaster Sci, Sendai, Miyagi 980, Japan.
EM izumi@irides.tohoku.ac.jp; shaw.rajib.5u@kyoto-u.ac.jp
RI Shaw, Rajib/AAI-4834-2020
CR [Anonymous], 2005, Ecosystems and Human Well being synthesis
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   [No title captured]
NR 41
TC 1
Z9 1
U1 0
U2 8
PU SPRINGER-VERLAG TOKYO
PI TOKYO
PA 37-3, HONGO 3-CHOME BONKYO-KU, TOKYO, 113, JAPAN
SN 2196-4106
BN 978-4-431-54877-5; 978-4-431-54876-8
J9 DISAST RISK REDUCT
PY 2014
BP 159
EP 176
DI 10.1007/978-4-431-54877-5_9
D2 10.1007/978-4-431-54877-5
PG 18
WC Environmental Studies
WE Book Citation Index – Social Sciences & Humanities (BKCI-SSH)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology
GA BC1SI
UT WOS:000350410700010
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Taylor, BM
   Harman, BP
   Inman, M
AF Taylor, Bruce M.
   Harman, Ben P.
   Inman, Matthew
TI Scaling-Up, Scaling-Down, and Scaling-Out: Local Planning Strategies for
   Sea-Level Rise in New South Wales, Australia
SO GEOGRAPHICAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE adaptation; climate change; retreat; policy options; regional networks;
   local government
ID CHANGE VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENTS; CLIMATE-CHANGE ADAPTATION; GOVERNANCE;
   POLICY; GOVERNMENT; BARRIERS; EUROPE
AB Globally, sea-level rise is expected to impact on many coastal regions and settlements. While mitigation of global greenhouse gas emissions remains an important task, adaptation is now seen as a critical component of the policy equation. Local government is a key player in adaptation planning and managing risk through their mandated role in land use planning and development control. Yet, managing the predicted impacts of climate change is proving to be a complex and difficult task for planners and policy makers. This paper reports on a case of local government deliberation on possible planning responses to address future sea-level rise impacts in New South Wales, Australia. Using structured, expert opinion of planners and other technical experts engaged in a collaborative network in the Sydney region, we explore the feasibility of implementing planning and policy measures at the local and regional scales to respond to inundation risk as a result of sea-level rise and storm surge events. Our research shows how local governments employ specific scale-oriented strategies to engage private and public actors at different scales to manage legal, financial, and technical risks in coastal adaptation.
C1 [Taylor, Bruce M.; Harman, Ben P.; Inman, Matthew] CSIRO Ecosyst Sci, Dutton Pk, Qld 4102, Australia.
C3 Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Harman, BP (corresponding author), CSIRO Ecosyst Sci, 41 Boggo Rd, Dutton Pk, Qld 4102, Australia.
EM ben.harman@csiro.au
RI Harman, Ben/C-7171-2011; Inman, Matthew/D-3596-2011; Taylor,
   Bruce/C-5771-2011
OI Taylor, Bruce/0000-0002-7740-2898
CR Abel N, 2011, ENVIRON SCI POLICY, V14, P279, DOI 10.1016/j.envsci.2010.12.002
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   [Anonymous], 2008, MAPPING CLIMATE CHAN
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   Gurran N., 2011, PLANNING CLIMATE CHA
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NR 40
TC 31
Z9 31
U1 0
U2 73
PU WILEY-BLACKWELL
PI HOBOKEN
PA 111 RIVER ST, HOBOKEN 07030-5774, NJ USA
SN 1745-5863
EI 1745-5871
J9 GEOGR RES-AUST
JI Geogr. Res.
PD AUG
PY 2013
VL 51
IS 3
BP 292
EP 303
DI 10.1111/1745-5871.12011
PG 12
WC Geography
WE Social Science Citation Index (SSCI)
SC Geography
GA 194SY
UT WOS:000322654200007
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Exnerová, Z
   Cienciala, E
AF Exnerova, Z.
   Cienciala, E.
TI Greenhouse gas inventory of agriculture in the Czech Republic
SO PLANT SOIL AND ENVIRONMENT
LA English
DT Article
DE greenhouse gas inventory; agriculture; enteric fermentation; manure
   management; agricultural soils; methane emissions; nitrous oxide
   emissions
AB As a part of its obligations under the Climate Convention, the Czech Republic must annually estimate and report its anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases. This also applies for the sector of agriculture, which is one of the greatest producers of methane and nitrous oxide emissions. This paper presents the approaches applied to estimate emissions in agricultural sector during the period 1990-2006. It describes the origin and sources of emissions, applied methodology, parameters and emission estimates for the sector of agriculture in the country. The total greenhouse gas emissions reached 7644 Gg CO2 eq. in 2006. About 59% (4479 Gg CO2 eq.) of these emissions has originated from agricultural soils. This quantity ranks agriculture as the third largest sector in the Czech Republic representing 5.3% of the total greenhouse gas emissions (GHG). The emissions under the Czech conditions consist mainly of emissions from enteric fermentation, manure management and agricultural soils. During the period 1990-2006, GHG emissions from agriculture decreased by 50%, which was linked to reduced cattle population and amount of applied fertilizers. The study concludes that the GHG emissions in the sector of agriculture remain significant and their proper assessment is required for sound climate change adaptation and mitigation policies,
C1 [Exnerova, Z.; Cienciala, E.] Inst Forest Ecosyst Res, Jilove, Czech Republic.
RP Exnerová, Z (corresponding author), Ustav Pro Vyzkum Lesnich Ekosystemu SRO, Areal 1 Jilovske AS, Jilove 25401, Czech Republic.
EM zuzana.exnerova@ifer.cz
RI Cienciala, Emil/AGM-4340-2022; Cienciala, Emil/F-1873-2011
OI Cienciala, Emil/0000-0002-1254-4254
CR [Anonymous], GOOD PRACTICE GUIDAN
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   HONS P, 2003, CZECH COUNTRY SPECIF
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   *NIR, 2007, NAT INV REP CZECH RE
   *NIR, 2007, AUSTR GOV SUBM UN FR
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   WALCZAK J, 2003, REALIZATION TASKS NA
NR 19
TC 4
Z9 5
U1 3
U2 24
PU CZECH ACADEMY AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES
PI PRAGUE
PA TESNOV 17, PRAGUE, 117 05, CZECH REPUBLIC
SN 1214-1178
EI 1805-9368
J9 PLANT SOIL ENVIRON
JI Plant Soil Environ.
PD AUG
PY 2009
VL 55
IS 8
BP 311
EP 319
DI 10.17221/2528-PSE
PG 9
WC Agronomy
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Agriculture
GA 497KI
UT WOS:000270057700001
OA gold
DA 2025-01-10
ER

PT J
AU Smith, TF
   Brooke, C
   Preston, B
   Gorddard, R
   Abbs, D
   McInnes, K
   Withycombe, G
   Morrison, C
AF Smith, T. F.
   Brooke, C.
   Preston, B.
   Gorddard, R.
   Abbs, D.
   McInnes, K.
   Withycombe, G.
   Morrison, C.
TI Managing for Climate Variability in the Sydney Region
SO JOURNAL OF COASTAL RESEARCH
LA English
DT Article
DE Climate vulnerability; Resilience; Adaptation; Systems approaches
AB SMITH, T. F., BROOKE, C., PRESTON, B., GORDDARD, R., ABBS, D., MCINNES, K. WITHYCOMBE, G. and MORRISON, C., 2007. Managing for Climate Variability in the Sydney Region. Journal of Coastal Research, SI 50 (Proceedings of the 9th International Coastal Symposium), 109 - 113. Gold Coast, Australia, ISSN 0749.0208
   Coastal research and management often has an issue-specific focus, with little attention paid to the interdependencies between those issues. Climate variability is one such issue that is impacted by, and impacts on, several other areas (e.g. coastal processes, infrastructure, health and regional economies). These interdependencies create challenges for local governments to scale-up so as to tackle these issues at a regional scale. Critical to this process of scaling-up is the adaptive capacity of local governments. A method to assist local governments deal with climate variability in the Sydney region is being developed by CSIRO and the Sydney Coastal Councils Group through the Australian Greenhouse Office National Climate Change Adaptation Program. The method consists of: (i) creating vulnerability mapping templates; (ii) working with local governments to determine collective and local vulnerabilities; (iii) analysis of local government priorities and capacity for adaptation; and (iv) assessment of transferability of the method to other regions.
C1 [Smith, T. F.] Univ Sunshine Coast, Maroochydore, DC 4558, Australia.
   [Brooke, C.; Preston, B.; Abbs, D.; McInnes, K.] CSIRO, Aspendale, Vic 3195, Australia.
   [Gorddard, R.] CSIRO, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia.
   [Withycombe, G.; Morrison, C.] Sydney Coastal Councils Grp, Sydney, NSW 2001, Australia.
C3 University of the Sunshine Coast; Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial
   Research Organisation (CSIRO); Commonwealth Scientific & Industrial
   Research Organisation (CSIRO)
RP Smith, TF (corresponding author), Univ Sunshine Coast, Maroochydore, DC 4558, Australia.
EM Tim.Smith@usc.edu.au; Cassandra.Brooke@csiro.au;
   Benjamin.Preston@csiro.au; Russell.Gorddard@csiro.au;
   Debbie.Abbs@csiro.au; Kathleen.McInnes@csiro.au;
   geoff@sydneycoastalcouncils.com.au; craig@sydneycoastalcouncils.com.au
RI Gorddard, Russell/D-7828-2011; McInnes, Kathleen/A-7787-2012
OI McInnes, Kathleen/0000-0002-1810-7215; Smith,
   Timothy/0000-0002-3991-5211
FU Australian Greenhouse Office
FX This project is supported by the Australian Greenhouse Office's National
   Climate Change Adaptation Programme.
CR ABBS D. J., 2006, IMPACT CLIMATE VARIA
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NR 30
TC 6
Z9 6
U1 0
U2 15
PU COASTAL EDUCATION & RESEARCH FOUNDATION
PI COCONUT CREEK
PA 5130 NW 54TH STREET, COCONUT CREEK, FL 33073 USA
SN 0749-0208
EI 1551-5036
J9 J COASTAL RES
JI J. Coast. Res.
PY 2007
SI 50
BP 109
EP 113
PG 5
WC Environmental Sciences; Geography, Physical; Geosciences,
   Multidisciplinary
WE Science Citation Index Expanded (SCI-EXPANDED)
SC Environmental Sciences & Ecology; Physical Geography; Geology
GA V16HI
UT WOS:000207860300022
DA 2025-01-10
ER

EF